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THE STANS
NATO restricts joint operations with Afghans
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Sept 18, 2012

NATO announces arrest over major base attack
Kabul (AFP) Sept 18, 2012 - NATO said it had arrested a Taliban leader on Tuesday wanted for an unprecedented attack on a major military base in southern Afghanistan that destroyed six US fighter jets and killed two US Marines.

The US-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said troops detained the suspect and two other suspected insurgents in the Nad Ali district of Helmand province, where the giant Camp Bastion is located.

"The Taliban leader was successfully taken into custody by the security force following joint efforts by Afghan and coalition forces to track down the Taliban insurgents responsible for the Camp Bastion attack," ISAF said.

The military said it believed the suspect had provided support to those who stormed the base late Friday, but did not elaborate further.

ISAF says it is still investigating how 15 Taliban commandos, armed with suicide vests, guns and rockets and wearing US uniforms, breached the perimeter wall of Camp Bastion, one of the most heavily guarded bases in the country.

The third in line to the British throne, Prince Harry, who is deployed to the base, was moved under guard to a secure location during the attack, Britain's defence minister said.

The prince was about two kilometres away with other Apache crew members when the base was attacked, but was not in danger, according to the minister, Philip Hammond.


NATO-led forces are scaling back joint operations with Afghan forces after a spate of "insider attacks" in which Afghan recruits turned their weapons on Western allies, officers said Tuesday.

The move marked a setback for the coalition's war strategy, as the planned withdrawal of Western troops hinges on training and advising Afghan forces to take over security by the end of 2014.

Under the new order, most joint patrols and advisory work with Afghan troops will only be conducted at the battalion level and above.

Cooperation with smaller units will have to be "evaluated on a case-by-case basis and approved by RC (regional) commanders", the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.

As the so-called "green-on-blue" attacks have grown, US commanders have gradually acknowledged the assaults pose a serious threat to the war effort and have struggled to stem the problem.

The commander of US and NATO troops in Afghanistan, General John Allen, "has directed all operational commanders to review force protection and tactical activities in the light of the current circumstances", a US military officer in Washington said in an email.

"This guidance was given at the recommendation of, and in conjunction with, key Afghan leaders," said the officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"This will likely lead to adjustments in exactly how, when and where ISAF troops operate, especially during the current period of heightened tension."

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, speaking at a news conference in Beijing, said the insider attacks were worrisome but that he believed General Allen had taken the right approach to counter the problem.

"We are concerned with regards to these insider attacks and the impact that they're having on our forces. General Allen has reflected that in the steps that he's taken," Panetta said after holding talks with his Chinese counterpart.

But he insisted the insider assaults would not delay or derail plans to complete a drawdown of troops by the end of 2014 as planned.

The decision came after six ISAF soldiers were shot dead by suspected Afghan police and after the Taliban destroyed six US fighter jets in an unprecedented assault on a major base in the south.

The change by NATO also followed violent protests by Muslims around the world over an amateur, American-made film deemed to insult the Islamic faith.

It was unclear how the new rules for joint patrols might affect the plan to pull out the bulk of NATO combat forces, as some Afghan units are considered ill-prepared to begin operating independently.

More than 30 insider attacks have claimed the lives of 51 troops in the NATO-led coalition so far this year, sowing mistrust between the Western force and its nominal allies and casting doubt on ISAF's "shoulder-to-shoulder" motto.

Commanders believe only a quarter of the assaults are the result of infiltration by Taliban insurgents and that the remainder were caused by cultural clashes and personal grievances.

Afghanistan's defence ministry said earlier this month that it had arrested or sacked hundreds of Afghan soldiers for suspected insurgency links.

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Prince Harry moved to safety in Afghan attack: minister
London (AFP) Sept 18, 2012 - Prince Harry was moved under guard to a secure location during a Taliban attack on Camp Bastion, the base where he is deployed in Afghanistan, Britain's defence minister has said.

Two US Marines were killed and unprecedented material damage caused when attackers armed with guns, rockets and suicide vests stormed the NATO base in Helmand province last Friday.

"Additional security arrangements" are in place to protect Britain's third in line to the throne on his second tour of duty in the country, Philip Hammond told BBC's Newsnight on Monday when questioned about the assault.

"Clearly there are fall-back plans and I can't go into the detail of them -- but once we knew on Friday night that the perimeter at Bastion had been breached he would have been moved to a secure position under effective guard," he said.

The prince was about two kilometres away with other Apache crew members when the heavily defended NATO base was attacked, but was not in danger, according to Hammond.

He said that while the 28-year-old royal is "no more or less exposed than any other Apache pilot" in combat, he remains under close protection.

"He is serving there as an ordinary officer but clearly there are additional security arrangements in place that recognise that he could be a target himself specifically as a result of who he is," Hammond added.

Although the Taliban have vowed to kill Prince Harry, one of its spokesmen told AFP that Friday's assault "had nothing to do with the prince".

The attack was the first in a wave of violence at the weekend which also saw six NATO soldiers -- two of them British -- killed in suspected shootings by Afghan police.

The deaths took to 51 the number of Western soldiers killed by their Afghan colleagues since the start of the year, in a growing trend that jeopardises NATO plans to train local forces to take over when they leave.

Earlier Hammond moved to assure British lawmakers that the surge in attacks would not derail Britain's operations in Afghanistan, where some 9,500 British troops are deployed.

"Our strategy is clear. We are mentoring and training the Afghan army and police to deliver security to their own people," he told Britain's House of Commons.

"We cannot and we will not allow the process to be derailed," he added.



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THE STANS
Afghan insider attacks are 'last gasp effort' by Taliban: US
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 17, 2012
US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Monday said insider attacks on NATO forces in Afghanistan were a "last gasp" tactic by Taliban insurgents who had been unable to make up lost territory. His comments came after a weekend in which six NATO troops were killed in apparent green-on-blue attacks, and appear to contradict commanders on the ground, who say most of the assaults are the result of ... read more


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