Afghan soldiers were waging a fierce ground battle with entrenched Taliban fighters in southern Afghanistan after a night of heavy US bombing that left many Taliban fighters dead, an Afghan intelligence chief said yesterday.
US warplanes began bombing two suspected Taliban positions in the Chinaran and Larzab mountains of Dai Chupan district in southern Zabul province late Thursday, provincial intelligence chief Khalil Hotak said.
The bombing ended at about 4am, and some 500 local Afghan soldiers moved in on the Taliban fighters -- who had taken up fortified positions in a deep mountain gorge and along a stream that runs through the area, Hotak said in a command center set up in Qalat, about 70km south of the fighting.
It was impossible to know the exact number of Taliban killed in the bombing and subsequent fighting, but Hotak said the number of fighters killed could be as high as 35. The US military could not immediately be reached for comment.
"The fighting was intense and we have inflicted heavy damage on the Taliban," Hotak said. "Our forces counted 35 Taliban bodies."
As he spoke, Hotak received calls from commanders at the scene, barking back orders for the ongoing fighting.
"We get information when the Taliban change their positions. Then we give this information to our commanders," he said.
Hotak said the largest suspected Taliban base was near a part of the mountain range called Hazar Buz, about 6km from the latest ground fighting.
The fighting was still going on by midmorning yesterday, Hotak said. He said his forces believed hundreds of Taliban have taken up positions in the area, with at least 15 hideouts. Hotak said he had no word yet on fresh casualties among the Afghan soldiers. Four Afghan soldiers were wounded in fighting Thursday.
Zabul has seen heavy fighting this week. The province's governor, Hafizullah Hashami, said even before the most recent fighting that about 40 Taliban had been killed in an ongoing operation to clear out guerrillas hiding in the mountainous area.
Afghan officials say they believe at least two prominent Taliban commanders, Mullah Dadullah and Mullah Shafiq, were leading the fighting in the area.
Hotak also named Mullah Abdul Qahar as one of the commanders leading the Taliban fighters. A native of Zabul, Qahar was a senior Taliban commander in the province before the militia was ousted in late 2001 by a US-led coalition, according to Hotak.
Haji Granai, an Afghan military commander, said that at least two US bombers and two helicopters helped in the operation, and Hotak said 20 American troops and 12 military vehicles were on the ground to aid the Afghan forces.
Two fighters arrested in the area two days ago told investigators they were recruited by the Taliban and fighters loyal to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. They said they received 38,000 Pakistani rupees (US$650) from the two groups, Hotak said.
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