Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
IEDs wreak havoc among foreign forces in Afghanistan
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
Yahoo! Search
Search:
Sign InNew User? Sign Up
News Home -
Help
Navigation
Primary Navigation
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Secondary Navigation
Australia
China
India
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia
Philippines
Thailand
Vietnam
Search
Search:
IEDs wreak havoc among foreign forces in Afghanistan
AFP - Sunday, September 6
KABUL (AFP) - - Cheap home-made bombs are exacting a high price from the world's most sophisticated armies battling Afghanistan's Taliban insurgency and have become the pivot on which the eight-year war is turning.
ADVERTISEMENT
The weapon of choice is killing foreign troops in record numbers and pushing Western public support for the war in Afghanistan into reverse.
As Taliban tactics sow terror, the 100,000 international troops operating under US and NATO command and with Afghan forces, are struggling to adjust their strategy to take on the insurgents as their reach expands.
"The insurgents have moved to terrorist-style tactics because they realise the high pay-off of IEDs (improvised explosive devices) and suicide bombings," said General Jim Dutton, deputy chief of NATO forces in Afghanistan.
"This is a quick win for them and we are putting a lot of work into dealing with it," he said in a recent interview with AFP.
Experts say the bombs are cheap and easy to make, are rigged to timers or remote controls, can be detonated when vehicles drive over pressure plates and are increasingly linked into a chain of bombs to cause maximum damage.
Bomb-makers cannibalise mortar shells and old mines, which are easy to find in the war-ravaged countryside, or jerry-rig mobile phones to crude explosives such as fertiliser and diesel fuel, or batteries.
Roadside bombs were used to great effect by insurgents in Iraq, where the impact on morale was as devastating as the death toll.
As in Iraq, Taliban insurgents are constantly modifying their designs to stay one step ahead of detection including disrupting radio signals that can detonate IEDs by remote control.
"You can't buy an IED," said a security company executive in Kabul. "The Taliban will use whatever they can to make a bang and cause problems."
NATO issues almost daily reports on IED deaths, principally in southern Taliban strongholds but increasingly in previously peaceful provinces.
The bombs cause horrific injuries to survivors -- blowing off limbs, shredding torsos after cutting through military vehicles and body armour worn by soldiers and journalists who travel with them.
Western governments spending billions to support the Afghan government have highlighted IEDs as the biggest challenge facing troops deployed to Taliban hotspots, especially in southern Helmand and Kandahar.
So far this year, more than 300 foreign troops have died in Afghanistan, according to the independent icasualties.org website, making 2009 the deadliest year of the eight-year war.
By August last year, IEDs accounted for 75 percent of all "enemy initiated action" in Afghanistan, according to the Pentagon's Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization (JIEDDO) set up to tackle the scourge.
The high casualty figures have seen US and British public approval for the war plunge as politicians and military leaders scramble for new ideas to combat the resurgent militants.
The expert deployment by the Taliban of unconventional weapons has stymied international forces, still waging conventional warfare, said a former US army officer who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"The enemy is adapting and evolving faster than (Western forces) can keep up and so the Americans and Brits are forced to literally inch forward in their operations to take territory from the bad guys because those roadside bombs could be buried anywhere," he said.
Countering IEDs is part of the new strategy put forward by the commander of US and NATO troops in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, in a review of the Afghan war handed to his superiors last week.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on Friday said "offensive operations are focusing more on countering the IED threat".
In a speech in London, Brown said foreign troop deaths "are almost twice as high as this time last year, and three quarters of these are now due to IEDs".
"Having failed in 2006 and 2007 to defeat international forces by conventional means, the Taliban have more than doubled their IED attacks over the past year," he said
"Already this year we have deployed 200 specialist counter-IED troops" to Afghanistan, he said.
"We are sending another 200 specialist forces and new equipment to find and defuse the IEDs and identify and target the networks who lay them."
McChrystal is expected to request more US troops for deployment to Afghanistan by the end of the year, to accelerate training of Afghan forces as well as specialists in IEDs, which include vehicle bombs and suicide car bombs.
Email Story
IM Story
Printable View
Blog This
Sign in to recommend this article »
0 users recommend
Related Articles: Asia Pacific
3 policemen found shot in head in PakistanAP - 56 minutes ago
US says will only talk to NKorea in six-party forumAFP - 1 hour 44 minutes ago
Taiwan to screen film about exiled Uighur activistAP - 1 hour 46 minutes ago
Angry China city calmer after top official sackedAP - 1 hour 57 minutes ago
Malaysia Muslim protest derails Hindu temple planAP - 2 hours 26 minutes ago
Enlarge Photo
IEDs wreak havoc among foreign forces in Afghanistan
Most Popular – Asia Pacific
Viewed
Appetite spells three wolves' doom in Switzerland
Poignant final farewell as Jackson laid to rest
US unemployment hits 9.7%, job losses narrow further
First baby born from new egg-screening technique
Chappaquiddick 'haunts me,' Kennedy said
View Complete List »
Search:
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy
- Terms of Service
- Community
- Intellectual Property Rights Policy
- Help
Other News on Sunday, 6 September 2009 Turkey's FM sure of eventual EU membership despite critics
No room for complacency on economy, IMF chief warns
Iran's Mousavi defiant after MPs back Ahmadinejad
Iran's Mousavi defiant after MPs back Ahmadinejad
| International
|
US sees global growth but 'challenges' ahead
Iran's Mousavi vows to fight poll 'fraud'
Marches for, against Chavez in divided Venezuela
| International
|
Woman's case reflects prisoners' treatment in Iran
Holy city twist: Arabs moving into Jewish areas
Russia says N. Caucasus rebels shot: report
| International
|
Twenty-five killed in south Sudan fighting
Mexico nabs suspected killer of 17 rehab patients
| International
|
Suspects released in Sarkozy death threats probe
| International
|
US, SKorea in top-level talks on NKorean nuclear programme
US general: Afghan civilians wounded at bomb site
Top official in China's volatile Urumqi sacked
After 8-year delay, VA program hopes to help vets
Transgender activist runs for mayor of Idaho town
China sacks top officials over Xinjiang unrest
Okada to be Japan's new foreign minister: Hatoyama
China boycotts opening of Taiwan-hosted games
NY mom charged after posing kids with guns
City leader sacked over China protests
US general inspects Afghan tanker airstrike site
'Terror' witness can sue senior Bush official: US court
US terror suspect fails to show in Pakistan court
Missing boy found alive, hidden at grandma's home
Pilot injured in Teterboro, NJ, crash dies
Recession hits nest eggs; US promotes ways to save
Obama's back-to-school message is responsibility
India promises $10 bln bond purchase: IMF
Chinatrust offers $2.4 bln for AIG Taiwan unit-source
Debts closing in on photographer Annie Leibovitz
'Accident' defies Hong Kong thriller genre
Austrian family seeks return of painting sold to Hitler: report
Calif. house owned by Groucho Marx for sale
German cineaste Herzog to teach 'guerrilla filmmaking'
Herzog screens 2 Golden Lion contenders
Michael Moore brings capitalist lovefest to Venice
Filmmaker Herzog is up against himself in Venice
US-Russia deal on Afghan flights takes effect
Anti-nuclear protest march against German U-turn
Ex-Google China chief to fund Chinese tech start-ups
Calm returns to China's Urumqi after officials sacked
| International
|
Astronauts conduct final spacewalk of Discovery mission
Vietnam frees blogger ahead of Australia visit
IEDs wreak havoc among foreign forces in Afghanistan
U.S. seeks clarity from North Korea on uranium
| International
|
US general promises Afghans inquiry into NATO air strike
Mexico nabs suspected killer of 17 rehab patients
| International
|
Six South Koreans missing in river near border
| International
|
Ex-Google China chief to fund Chinese tech start-ups
| Technology
|
Vietnam frees blogger ahead of Australia visit
| Technology
|
Obama adviser Van Jones resigns amid controversy
Malaysia Muslim protest derails Hindu temple plan
Magnitude-4.0 quake shakes Central Coast of Calif.
Call for firm action in China's restive Xinjiang
Hillary movie puts campaign finance limits at risk
3 killed, 880 people rescued from Philippine ferry
INSIDE WASHINGTON: A lawmaker's long reach
Vietnam reports 3rd swine flu death
Airplane trade ruling comes in era of bailouts
Vietnam police release detained blogger
U.S. seeks clarity from North Korea on uranium
For many, Labor Day just another stressful day
Dem negotiator: Time here for health care action
Myanmar's ethnic challenges in elections: analysts
Health care effort could depend on Maine's Snowe
Six South Koreans missing in river near border
Hong Kong reports 11th swine flu death
Top official in volatile Chinese city sacked
Crews dodge flying corks in Wyo. wine truck fire
US kidnapper Garrido told mum victim was his daughter
McDonald's takes McCurry to court again in Malaysia
G20 leaders left to-do list ahead of summit
SKorean TV giants tout differing technologies
Nokia strikes back against 'smart' rivals
India's budget airlines leave rivals in vapour stream
Apple's iPhone launch in China no easy task: experts
Hand gel on menu as Madrid restaurant fights swine flu
AIG sells asset management unit for $500 million
Suzuki Motor to build new auto plant in India: report
Weather presenters grapple with uncertain climate
Twilight life of Malaysia's Muslim transsexuals
'Sopranos' actor Imperioli directs first film
Moore pulls no punches in 'Capitalism: A Love Story'
Suspect released in probe of French filmmaker's death
In economic crisis, SAfrica designers practice 'chic-onomics'
Israel will approve new settlement homes: minister
New revelations add twist to ex-French PM's trial
Hundreds rescued from sinking ferry in Philippines
| International
|
British business chiefs upbeat about economy
Karzai inches toward Afghan poll win
| International
|
Israel to approve settlement expansion: minister
Israeli Cabinet backs new West Bank construction
Chevron awaits verdict in environmental damage case
Israel affirms plans to approve more settler homes
UK denies putting Libya first in IRA victims' row
| International
|
Israel PM to OK 100s of new settlements: minister
Kuwait to keep Citigroup, Merrill Lynch stakes: report
Israel affirms plans to approve more settler homes
| International
|
Yemen rebels deny breaking truce
| International
|
Iran says develops stealth missile interceptor system
| International
|
Mother comes out against Dutch girl's solo sail
| International
|
Police, poll protesters clash in Gabon's oil hub
| International
|
Fire no longer threatening LA-area communities
Former Australia PM Howard home from hospital stay
Workers find Bay Bridge crack; Shutdown could last
Okada to be next Japan foreign minister, media say
Obama's environmental adviser resigns: report
Philippine troops kill 4 communist rebels in south
Palestinians 'seriously considering' one-state
Nine dead as Philippines ferry sinks
China's Urumqi still edgy after officials sacked
Hundreds rescued from sinking ferry in Philippines
NKorea produces part 2 of Kim Jong Il documentary
Japanese prince, 1st male heir in decades, turns 3
3 policemen found shot in head in Pakistan
Lehman investors in Hong Kong protest central bank
US eyes recovery year after near financial meltdown
Michael Jackson glove fetches $49,000 in Australia
"Capitalism is evil," says new Michael Moore film
Michael Jackson's glove auctioned in Australia
Capitalism is evil, says new Michael Moore film
| Entertainment
|
US libraries hit back over challenges to kids books
Michael Jackson glove fetches $49,000 in Australia
| Entertainment
|
Roma kids discover the power of school
Lasseter sees more chance for animation at Oscars
| Entertainment
|
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights