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Taliban vow 'long fight' despite 100 dead in clashes
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Taliban vow 'long fight' despite 100 dead in clashes
AFP - Wednesday, October 7
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Taliban vow 'long fight' despite 100 dead in clashes
Slideshow: Full Photo Coverage: War On Terror
KABUL (AFP) - – A fierce weekend clash in the remote mountains of eastern Afghanistan that left eight US soldiers dead also killed more than 100 Taliban fighters, NATO's International Security Assistance Force said Tuesday.
But on the eve of the eighth anniversary of the US-led military action to oust them from power, the Taliban vowed to continue their deadly insurgency, warning foreign forces: "We are prepared for a long fight."
Three days after NATO's biggest loss of life in a single incident since 10 French troops were killed in an ambush in August 2008, NATO said the Taliban had suffered "significantly higher losses than originally thought".
"A more detailed battlefield assessment following the October 3 attack in Nuristan (province) has determined that enemy forces suffered more than 100 dead during the well-coordinated defence," an ISAF statement read.
Hundreds of militant fighters on Saturday swept down a hillside at dawn near the mountainous border with Pakistan, over which Al-Qaeda and Taliban sympathisers are based, to attack two Afghan army and NATO outposts.
The resulting firefight lasted into the night and led to US troops calling in airstrikes.
Two Afghan soldiers and a police officer also lost their lives in the attack, which was claimed by the Taliban.
Some 13 police officers and two Afghan journalists working for a radio station set up with US help were captured, local officials said, adding that only five Taliban were killed.
ISAF said Tuesday the Hizb-i-Islami militia of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar was also possibly involved.
Hekmatyar, a Pashtun warlord and former Afghan prime minister, is one of Afghanistan's most wanted men and known to ally himself with guerrillas opposed to foreign forces.
In the wake of the attack, NATO and Afghan troops conducted a joint operation to flush out insurgents thought responsible.
This year has been the deadliest for foreign forces in Afghanistan since the war began. According to an independent website, icasualties.org, which tracks coalition deaths, 400 international soldiers have died so far in 2009.
Faced with an upsurge in violence, the head of the 100,000-strong US and NATO force, General Stanley McChrystal, has reportedly asked for 40,000 more troops and wants a switch to concentrating on the militant threat in cities.
But some analysts have suggested that redeploying troops from rural regions, particularly in the strategically important border areas, could allow the Taliban to spread their footprint further.
Haroun Mir, director of Afghanistan's Centre for Research and Policy Studies, told AFP that more similar large-scale attacks were likely as the Taliban seek to exploit a lack of NATO and Afghan troops along the remote frontier.
One think-tank has said that despite being virtually wiped out in early 2002, the Taliban now has a "permanent presence" in 80 percent of Afghanistan.
The Taliban said in a statement that they were still fighting for the "freedom of the country and Islamic sovereignty", as the increasingly bloody war enters its ninth year.
The statement, emailed to news organisations and written in Pashtun, denied they ever had a programme to harm other countries.
But they warned foreign forces: "If you still want to occupy this proud and religious people's country under the name of fighting terrorism, you should know that we have a lot of patience and we are prepared for a long fight."
The militants also warned the "Western occupiers" that they should "learn from history" and that Afghans were prepared to sacrifice their lives for Islam and their country.
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