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US launches air strikes in Afghan district of Sangin

The Taliban has taken control of most of the strategic district of Sangin where heavy fighting continues.


 


24 Dec 2015 – US aircraft carried out two attacks in Sangin, the district in southern Afghanistan overrun by Taliban fighters this week, officials said as the battle for the strategic province of Helmand continued.
“US forces conducted two strikes in Sangin on December 23 against threats to the force,” a spokesman for the military coalition said.
Earlier on Thursday, Afghanistan’s government sent reinforcements to help besieged forces as Taliban claim to have taken control of almost all of Sangin district.
The Taliban spokesperson, Zabihullah Mujahid, said on Wednesday that their fighters had seized the entire district including police and military installations and their flags had been raised.
However, Helmand’s deputy governor, Mohammad Jan Rasoolyar, denied the claim.
“We are still fighting to push back the Taliban. Parts of Sangin are under the Taliban control but not the police and military installations,” he told Al Jazeera.
“The military planes have dropped food and supplies to the Afghan forces on ground.”
The UK Ministry of Defense said on Tuesday that British troops had been deployed to the province to support local forces after the Afghan Defense Minister called for a desperate international support and air cover.
“As part of the UK’s ongoing contribution to NATO’s Resolute Support Mission, a small number of UK personnel have been deployed to Camp Shorabak in Helmand Province in an advisory role,” a spokesman said.
“In total the UK has around 450 troops in Afghanistan mentoring and supporting the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces and the Afghan Security Ministries.”
Sangin has seen more than 100 British troops losing their lives during the decade long combat mission in Afghanistan.
The Taliban statement regarding the British troop’s deployment said that before entering Afghanistan “they should have studied the history of their ancestors and should have learned a lesson from the repeated defeat”.
“For that reason they would have not come with the intent to invade our country,” the statement said.
“They were defeated even after the presence of thousands of troops and the same will happen with these few hundred troops, this means nothing else but a shameful humiliation for them.
“They have made no accomplishment even after fighting for the past 14 years. We are still strong.”
David Sedney, a foreign policy analyst at the Wilson Center in Washington D.C, told Al Jazeera that the Afghan army is showing its weakness.
“The Taliban have made big advances in Helmand province in summer and into the winter and the offensive is increasing,” he said.
“They [Taliban] put a lot of fighters a lot of weapons in Helmand province that is right in the border with Pakistan and most of the fighters and weapons come across the border, there is nothing that stops them.
“The Afghan National Army core that was charged with the defending Helmand was the newest one and when the United States and NATO pulled back, they decided not the leave any serious advisors with them, just a few special forces troops, so you have force that is poorly equipped and is really struggling to survive.”


 


No end to violence


 


The northern city of Kunduz briefly fell to the Taliban in late September – the biggest victory for the group in 14 years of war.
Earlier this week, a suicide bomber attacked a joint Afghan-NATO convoy near Bagram airbase near Kabul, killing six foreign soldiers and wounding three others. The Taliban claimed responsibility.
“Recently, the Taliban has shown an extraordinary capability to launch major attacks on government forces. They have proven capable of using both guerrilla fighters and engaging in conventional warfare,” Hashmatullah Moslih, Al Jazeera’s political analyst said.
“At the same time, the government soldiers are static – sitting in their outposts defensively, effectively handing the initiative to the Taliban.”
This month marks a year since the US-led NATO mission in Afghanistan transitioned into an Afghan-led operation, with allied nations assisting in training local forces.
US President Barack Obama announced in October that thousands of US troops would remain in Afghanistan past 2016, keeping the current force of 9,800 troops, amid a surge in Taliban attacks.


 

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