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  1. #1
    Small Wars Journal SWJED's Avatar
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    Default Afghan Bombings May Be Shift in Tactics

    20 Jan. Associated Press - Afghan Bombings May Be Shift in Tactics.

    ... The U.S. military calls it a sign of desperation, but it's spooking other NATO countries as they prepare to deploy thousands of troops to the volatile south of the country to take over from American forces. Political opposition in The Netherlands is so strong it has led to a parliamentary debate on whether to approve the planned deployment and threatened to topple the government...

    Suicide bombings used to be rare in Afghanistan. There were none in 2002, two in 2003, four in 2004 and four from January 2005 until late September, when the recent spate of 20 started, according to information provided by the U.S. military, NATO peacekeepers and Afghan officials...

    U.S. military spokesman Col. James Yonts said the recent attacks appear timed to intimidate the international community ahead of two key events: an aid donors' conference in London later this month and the switch by midyear from U.S. forces to NATO troops in the south...

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    Default Taliban Suicide Bombing Patterns

    The Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Monitor:

    Cheney Attack Reveals Taliban Suicide Bombing Patterns
    ...Iraqi suicide bombers from such jihadi groups as Ansar al-Sunnah and al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia frequently seek to inflict high casualty rates by attacking soft targets, such as crowded markets. Their objective is to cause as much bloodshed as possible, incite sectarian violence and destroy U.S. efforts to construct civil society in Iraq. Afghan suicide bombers, on the other hand, appear to have different objectives and have focused almost exclusively on hard targets (government, police, military). In 2007, for example, the Taliban have attacked foreign or Afghan military/police targets in 16 of their 22 bombings (in three cases the target was undetermined).

    This in-depth analysis of 158 Afghan suicide bombings since 2001 shows that this is no anomaly and demonstrates an important point: in only eight of the 158 suicide attacks from 2001-2007 did civilians appear to be the direct target of Afghan bombers. Further scrutiny of these eight civilian attacks reveals an important fact. In two of these instances, the Taliban apologized for inflicting civilian casualties and in one case a Taliban spokesmen actually denied involvement. In four other cases the suicide bombers seem to have been targeting passing military convoys or governmental representatives in crowds; therefore, the high civilian casualties appear to have been unintended "collateral damage." In only two instances were civilians clearly the target of Afghan suicide bombers.

    These findings tell us volumes about the Taliban's overall strategy in employing suicide bombing as a tactic. Far from imitating Iraqi insurgent tactics, the Taliban are trying to avoid losing the battle for the hearts and minds of the Afghan people by needlessly killing civilians....

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    Council Member tequila's Avatar
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    Interesting article. Shows how the war in Afghanistan differs greatly from Iraq in that the Afghan struggle has not yet turned into a sectarian struggle as it largely has become in Iraq. Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but the Taliban are still largely fighting on their own ethnic homeground in the south and east, among fellow Sunni Pashtuns --- unlike Iraq where suicide bombing is principally aimed at intimidating civilians and leadership of another sect. Suicide bombings of Sunnis by Sunnis in Iraq are rare.

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    One thing that has interested me in the past is the rise in suicide bombing among the Taliban. I seem to recall that in Rashid's book ("Taliban"), that, at the time of the book's publication, the Taliban were opposed to suicide bombing on religious grounds. Now apparently the tactic is up for grabs.

    On a related note, there have been other shifts in Taliban moral/religious sensibilities: Years ago, they were opposed to electronic media in all its forms due to prohibitions on using images of humans. Now they are quite amenable to use of electronic media for propaganda purposes.

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    Council Member tequila's Avatar
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    Not the first of their many tactical shifts --- witness their many opinions on the legality of opium, for instance.

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    Indeed, their odyssey of thought on Opium has shifted even more, given their history before the US even became involved in that wretched country.

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    Default Kabul Blast Shows Taliban Capability

    18 June Washington Post - Kabul Blast Shows Taliban Capability by Griff Witte and Javed Hamdard.

    Since winter, the Taliban had been promising a spring offensive. It didn't come. Instead, NATO and U.S. forces have pounded the group's positions and killed its senior leadership.

    But with summer well underway in Afghanistan, the radical Islamic movement showed on Sunday that it is still capable of mounting one of the most devastating insurgent strikes the country has seen.

    In the single deadliest suicide attack since the Taliban was ousted from power in 2001, a bomber hopped on a packed bus in downtown Kabul and triggered his explosives, killing 24 to 35 people and wounding dozens more. A purported commander for the Taliban asserted responsibility for the attack...

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    Default ###-For-Tat

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19310548/

    "MIRAN SHAH, Pakistan - Explosions at a suspected militant hideout in northwestern Pakistan near the Afghan border on Tuesday caused casualties, the army said.

    Three missiles fired from Afghanistan destroyed a training facility in Pakistan, killing 17 militants and wounding 10 others, according to an intelligence official in North Waziristan. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to media."

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    Council Member Tc2642's Avatar
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    Default Nato accuses Taliban of using children in suicide missions

    Children as young as six are being used by the Taliban in increasingly desperate suicide missions, coalition forces in Afghanistan claimed yesterday.

    The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), to which Britain contributes 5,000 troops in southern Afghanistan, revealed that soldiers defused an explosive vest which had been placed on a six-year-old who had been told to attack Afghan army forces in the east of the country.

    The boy was spotted after appearing confused at a checkpoint. The vest was defused and no one was hurt.
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanista...109574,00.html

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    Default Taliban ambush girls returning from school

    This post has the story of the attack that killed two, a 10 year old and a 13 year old girl. Three others were wounded.

    We probably have not yet mined the depths of depravity of the Taliban and al Qaeda.

    Both this story and the one on the six year old human bomb attack came the same week the Taliban used children as human shields while provoking a bombing attack.

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    Default Bomber’s End: Flash of Terror, Humble Grave

    In Kabul, the burial of a suicide bomber occurs at a secret time in a secret place, the forgettable end to what most here consider an unforgivable act.
    30 Jun 07 New York Times - World - Asia Pacific
    Last edited by Culpeper; 07-01-2007 at 04:28 PM. Reason: date of article
    "But suppose everybody on our side felt that way?"
    "Then I'd certainly be a damned fool to feel any other way. Wouldn't I?"


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    The Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Monitor, 19 Jul 07:

    The Taliban Fedayeen: The World's Worst Suicide Bombers?
    Suicide bombing statistics from Afghanistan alarmingly demonstrate that, if the current trend continues, 2007 will surpass last year in the number of overall attacks. While there were 47 bombings by mid-June 2006, there have been approximately 57 during the same period this year. Compounding fears of worse carnage to come, Afghanistan's most lethal single suicide bombing attack to date recently took the lives of 35 Afghan police trainers near Kabul. When considering the expanding use of IEDs and the discovery of the first Iraqi-style Explosively Formed Projectile (EFP) in Afghanistan in May (i.e. a more deadly form of IED that has killed high numbers of soldiers in Iraq), it is understandable that critics of the war in Afghanistan discuss it in alarmist tones. Approximately 80% of U.S. casualties in Iraq come from IEDs, and members of the U.S. and Afghan military who were interviewed for this study believed that the absence of mass casualty suicide bombings and EFPs were the two factors that made Afghanistan less dangerous than Iraq. A deeper investigation of the wave of suicide bombings that have swept the country in 2006 and 2007 paints a less bleak picture....

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    Default Suicide Attacks in Afghanistan

    United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, Suicide Attacks in Afghanistan (2001-2007), 9 September 2007.

    This study presents the main findings of UNAMA’s comprehensive inquiry into the phenomenon of suicide attacks in Afghanistan. This study places suicide attacks in Afghanistan in the context of their occurrence in other countries and eras, identifying ways in which suicide attacks in Afghanistan differ from attacks elsewhere. It details available information about the backgrounds of the attackers and the sources of support they enjoy, both in Afghanistan and across the border in Pakistan. This report describes the human cost borne by civilian victims and identifies several policy implications as well as mitigating strategies.
    Full report here.

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    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Default Afghan child bomber interviewed

    Check the article on The Croissant, a French site specialising in North Africa, which has this short story:

    http://thecroissant.com/sample_artic...article&id=466

    Unable to comment on accuracy.

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    Default Suicide Bomber Falls Down and Can't Get Back Up

    Suicide Bomber Falls Down Stairs and Blows Himself Up
    A would-be suicide bomber fell down a flight of stairs and blew himself up as he headed out for an attack in Afghanistan, police say.

    It was the second such incident in two days, with another man killing himself and three others on Tuesday when his bomb-filled waistcoat exploded as he was putting it on in the southern town of Lashkar Gah.

    Yesterday's blast was in a busy market area of the eastern town of Khost, a deputy provincial police chief said.....

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    I guess all that SOF "tie their shoe laces together when they're not looking" training is paying off...

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    Council Member Tom Odom's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rex Brynen View Post
    I guess all that SOF "tie their shoe laces together when they're not looking" training is paying off...
    I had visions of a "Life Alert" commercial...

    "I have fallen downstairs and pieces of me are stuck on the ceiling.."

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    Further operator error:

    Three NATO soldiers were wounded in one of the incidents and, in another, three civilians were hurt when a suicide vest detonated as it was being strapped to a would-be attacker in the southwestern province of Nimroz, the provincial governor said.

    The man trying to put on the vest and someone helping him were killed in the explosion, which took place in a small grocery store, Nimroz governor Ghulam Dastageer Azad said.

    "The shop collapsed and three civilians outside were wounded, two critically," he said. The owner of the store may have been working with Taliban insurgents, he added.
    http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Dis...8020881947.xml

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    Council Member AdamG's Avatar
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    Damn, you beat me to it! See that on Fark?
    Quote Originally Posted by Stan View Post
    There's some sound history and reasoning behind having a pin in a grenade, a fuse on your artillery round, and a safety on your IED
    IED = the zip gun of the ordnance world*.
    * YMMV. Front towards Enemy. Have all contraptions inspected by a competent Jihadi before use.
    Last edited by Jedburgh; 01-25-2008 at 02:27 AM.

  20. #20
    Council Member Stan's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by AdamG View Post
    Damn, you beat me to it! See that on Fark?
    There's some sound history and reasoning behind having a pin in a grenade, a fuse on your artillery round, and a safety on your IED
    If you want to blend in, take the bus

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