KABUL, Afghanistan - Fighting between Afghan forces and Taliban militants in
a volatile southern province has left at least 49 militants and seven police
dead in what appears to be the biggest independent operation yet by Afghan
forces, officials said Friday.
Afghan policemen inspect the site of a suicide bomb attack on
a convoy of Western troops in the eastern province of Nangarhar March 23,
2007. [Reuters]
|
The Afghan army and police carried
out the operation in the Gereshk district of Helmand province Thursday morning,
and NATO-led troops were not involved, said Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi, the
Defense Ministry spokesman.
Azimi said 49 Taliban bodies had been found and estimated the overall
militant death total at 69, saying the Taliban had buried 10 bodies and taken 10
bodies from the battlefield. Seven police were killed.
The troops were conducting searches on Friday following the Thursday clash,
the largest independent operation by the fledgling Afghan security forces, Azimi
said.
"They showed the capacity and capability of Afghanistan's National Army,
without the help of foreign troops," Azimi said.
Lt. Col. Angela Billings, a spokeswoman for NATO's International Security
Assistance Force, confirmed that ISAF troops did not take part in the operation,
part of a major joint push by alliance and Afghan troops against the
Taliban-inspired insurgency in the country's south.
"There's more and more instances where we're stepping back further and
further as we continue with the training, of the army and police, said Billings.
About 4,500 NATO and 1,000 Afghan forces are in and around Helmand province
as part of Operation Achilles, launched this month. In recent months Taliban
militants and foreign fighters have streamed into Helmand province, the world's
leading opium-producing region, according to U.S. and NATO officials.
Operation Achilles has seen heavy fighting between British forces stationed
in Helmand province and Taliban militants, but neither NATO or Afghan officials
have reported any large-scale casualties among Taliban fighters during the
operation.
Violence in Afghanistan has spiked over the last year, with Taliban militants
setting off a record number of roadside and suicide attacks. U.S. and NATO
officials say they expect violence to again increase this spring and
summer.