
Male insurgents are hiding among villagers in eastern Afghanistan
dressed in burqas in an attempt to avoid detection, the US regional
military commander said Wednesday.
Major General John Campbell, in charge of a large area of eastern
Afghanistan that includes Kabul, said the new tactics there follow
the first use of a female suicide bomber in the country.
Male insurgents dressed in women's all-cover burqa dresses have
struck in southern Afghanistan -- including a failed suicide attack
in March -- but never in the east.
"One of the tactics that has changed over the years is that you now
see men dressed up in burqas going through villages, something that
we had not seen in years past," Campbell told reporters at the
Pentagon via satellite from Afghanistan.
US and NATO forces typically overlook women in their hunt for
insurgents, but that is likely to change following a June 22 attack
by a female suicide bomber against a US-Afghan army patrol in the
eastern Kunar province. The attack killed 10 US soldiers.
The Taliban claimed credit for the attack, saying in a statement
that it was carried out by an Afghan woman named "Halima."
There have been some 450 suicide attacks in Afghanistan over the
last nine years, Campbell said, but this was the first involving a
female suicide bomber.
Campbell is in charge of Regional Command East, an area of 14
provinces surrounding Kabul that has a 450 kilometer (280 mile) long
border with Pakistan.
In the first half of 2010 the number of attacks in his region "has
risen about 12 percent," Campbell said, adding that US and NATO
forces are bracing for more.
"We expect and we know that we're going to have a tough summer. The
insurgents will not allow us to bring in additional forces without
making a statement themselves."
* * * * *
They are not worthy to do combat
with American troops.
I recommend the immediate redeployment
of all American forces to a safe distance (such as Europe), to be
followed forthwith by the nuclear incineration of Afghanistan.
     
This action will probably be
agreeable to the World Health Organization as a method of preventing
the spread of HIV/AIDS, and will probably serve as a present day
re-enactment of events in the Bible's Old Testament pertaining to
Sodom and Gomorrah.
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