Afghan Taliban threatens attacks

A senior leader of Afghanistan's Taliban warned today it will launch a new large-scale operation against the Afghan government…

A senior leader of Afghanistan's Taliban warned today it will launch a new large-scale operation against the Afghan government, diplomatic missions, foreign troops and anyone supporting them.

Despite the increasing number of Western forces, the Taliban, ousted in a US-led invasion in 2001, have made a comeback in recent years and carried-out a series of stunning attacks in several major cities, including Kabul.

Posted on a Taliban webiste, (www.alemarah1.org) a message quoting the deputy leader of the movement, Mullah Brother Akhund, said the "Nasrat" (victory), will begin tomorrow and include ambushes, bombs and suicide bomb attacks.

"The targets of these operations will be the military units of the invading forces, diplomatic centres, mobile convoys, high-ranking officials of the puppet administration, members of parliament and personnel of the so-called defence, interior and national security ministries," the message said.

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Through the offensive, the Taliban will seek to further tighten the encirclement of the enemy in the provinces and attack their supply routes, it added.

The message urged Afghan security forces to desert and join the militants and ordered private firms as well as individuals to stop working for the foreign troops.

The Taliban have made advances in recent years not only in Afghanistan, but also in neighbouring Pakistan where they have some bases in the lawless tribal border region.

To fight the growing insurgency, the new administration in Washington has pledged to send an extra 21,000 troops this year to Afghanistan, where the level of foreign forces stand at more than 70,000. The additional US troops will be deployed mainly to the south east of the country.

The Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders are still at large and thought to be in hiding in the tribal region on the Afghan-Pakistan border near to Pakistan's lawless northern tribal areas.

Reuters