Nato and Afghan government forces have arrested a senior Taliban commander in a raid in the south of the country.
The arrest last night in Helmand province came as US Defence Secretary Robert Gates was in Afghanistan, seeking ways to boost President Hamid Karzai's government and stop resurgent Taliban militants.
"During the night Afghan National Security Forces and ISAF soldiers conducted a meticulously planned and executed raid," Nato said in a statement, referring to its Afghan force known as the International Security Assistance Force.
"The raid succeeded in the capture of a prominent Taliban commander who was wanted for questioning by the Afghan National Police in relation to a large number of criminal acts," it said.
The force declined to identify the commander but said he had fled from a recent Nato operation in neighbouring Kandahar province to Helmand.
Last year was the bloodiest in Afghanistan since 2001 when US-led forces overthrew the Taliban government.
Fighting has tailed off since winter set in, although several big clashes have occured in the south and east over the past week and US and Nato forces expect a fresh Taliban offensive in the spring.
Nato killed several local-level Taliban commanders in air strikes in the south last month.
The Afghan government said yesterday a Taliban spokesman and aide to the group's fugitive leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar, was arrested after he crossed into Afghanistan from Pakistan. As violence has increased in Afghanistan, pressure has mounted on Pakistan to tackle Taliban sanctuaries on its side of the lawless border.