An insurgent raid that penetrated a US outpost in eastern Afghanistan, killing nine soldiers, has deepened doubts about the US military’s effort to contain Islamic militants and keep locals on its side.
Moving in darkness before dawn on Sunday, some 200 fighters surrounded the newly built base in a remote area near the Pakistan border without being spotted by the troops inside, said General Mohammad Qasim Jangalbagh, the provincial police chief.
He said people in the adjacent village of Wanat aided the assault. About 20 local families left their homes in anticipation of the raid, while other tribesmen stayed behind “and helped the insurgents during the fight,” Jangalbagh said.
The result was the deadliest incident for US forces in Afghanistan since June 2005, when 16 American soldiers were killed as a rocket-propelled grenade shot down their helicopter.
Violence has been increasing in Afghanistan and many people are now questioning whether the Taliban-led insurgency is gaining, not losing, momentum seven years after the hard-line Islamic regime was ousted by a US-led invasion.
The coordinated assault at Wanat sent a strong signal to other insurgent groups that “America cannot resist them anymore,” said Tamim Nuristani, who was fired as provincial governor last week by Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s administration for criticizing a US airstrike that Afghan officials say killed civilians on July 4 in the same area as Sunday’s attack.
Nuristani said the attackers at Wanat were a mix of Afghan and Pakistan-based militants, some with al-Qaeda links — a sign, he said, that cooperation is growing between what had been often fractious factions fighting the Western military presence in Afghanistan.
“The [attackers] were not only from Nuristan but from other districts,” Nuristani said. “They are not only Taliban. They were [Pakistan-based] Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, Hezb-i-Islami, Taliban and those people who are dissatisfied with the [Karzai] government after these recent incidents. They all came together for this one.”
The attack — which US and NATO officials said happened in Kunar Province but which Afghan officials said was in neighboring Nuristan — reinforced recent assessments by US officials that militant attacks are becoming more complex and better coordinated.
A NATO official said the attackers used houses, shops and a mosque in Wanat for cover during the hours-long battle.
The militants showered the small base — which had been established just three days earlier — with machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and mortar shells, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
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