Taliban threaten spring suicide offensive

Afghanistan: The Taliban threatened a spring offensive of thousands of suicide bombers as the United States, doubling its combat…

Afghanistan:The Taliban threatened a spring offensive of thousands of suicide bombers as the United States, doubling its combat troops in Afghanistan, took over command of the 33,000-strong Nato force yesterday.

As Gen Dan McNeill took over the International Security Assistance Force (Isaf), Nato said a local Taliban leader in a southern district was killed yesterday in a drive to recapture the key town of Musa Qala from the rebels.

The Taliban warns 2007 will be "the bloodiest year for foreign troops", saying they have 2,000 suicide bombers ready to go into action when winter snows melt in a few months.

"We have made 80 per cent preparations to fight American and foreign forces and we are about to start war," Mullah Hayatullah Khan, a 35-year-old black-bearded guerrilla leader, told Reuters at a secret base in the east on Saturday.

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Mr Khan says the 2,000 are just 40 per cent of fighters preparing to become suicide bombers, a tactic almost unheard of in Afghanistan until last year as militants copied Iraq.

"Now there is great enthusiasm for suicide attacks among the Taliban and these attacks will increase," he said.

Hours after the handover, a suicide bomber attacked a Nato convoy in Afghanistan's second city and birthplace of the Taliban, Kandahar, killing himself but no one else, police said.

Gen McNeill takes over the assistance force at a pivotal time, analysts say.

Last year was the bloodiest since US-led forces ousted the Taliban government in 2001.

More than 4,000 people died, a quarter of them civilians and 170 foreign soldiers.

"The first three to five months of 2007 are absolutely crucial to the entire Afghan effort as the mission has been defined - that is, in bringing security to the southern provinces," Sean Kay, a security expert and professor of international relations at the Ohio Wesleyan University, said.

From the beginning, he said, the US had failed to field enough forces in Afghanistan to prevent the re-emergence of a counter-insurgency and Nato continued to suffer from this particularly in the south.

Meanwhile Afghan foreign minister Rangeen Dadfar Spanta told Germany's Deutschlandfunk radio that the West was not providing enough financial backing for his country.

"If we want 'project Afghanistan' to succeed and effectively combat terror, then more money really needs to be invested, and the international community's obligation in Afghanistan must be seen as a long-term obligation," he said yesterday.

Outgoing Nato commander British Gen David Richards, who saw his force grow from 9,000 as it expanded into the Taliban's southern heartland during his nine-month command, was upbeat about prospects.

"2006 was a year of Isaf and ANSF (Afghan security forces) success and Taliban failure," he said. "The Taliban did not achieve a single objective.

"We have proved that Nato can and will defeat the Taliban militarily and, come the spring, an Isaf offensive - not a Taliban offensive - will set the conditions to defeat the insurgents again," he said.

The United States has effectively doubled its combat troops on the ground by extending the tours of duty for some soldiers by four months, which will also provide a rapid reaction force Gen Richards long demanded but was never given.

President Bush is asking Congress for an extra $10.6 billion over two years for the Afghan army and police.

Washington has pressed its allies for more troops and an end to restrictions on how and where their soldiers can fight.

But so far, only Britain and Poland have committed more men and women and France is pulling its special forces out.

- (Reuters)