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agonyea
22 June 2008, 04:37
Afghan base in Paktika hit with rounds launched from Pakistan

By Bill RoggioJune 21, 2008 7:14 PM



An Afghan Army base and a Coalition base were targeted by rockets or mortars launched from across the border in Pakistan on Saturday, the International Security Assistance Force reported.

Three rounds landed inside the Afghan National Army base inside Paktika province, while another three rounds landed outside the ISAF base. No casualties were reported in the initial attack.

Coalition forces responded to the attack with artillery fire after it was "determined the origination of the rounds to be in Pakistan." The Pakistani military was "immediately notified" after the attack took place.

There are no reports of casualties inside Pakistan at this time. The Associated Press of Pakistan, the government's news service, and the Pakistani media have not reported on the incident.

It is unclear is the initial attack was launched by the Pakistani military or the Taliban. Paktika province borders the lawless Pakistani tribal districts of North and South Waziristan, as well as the district of Zhob in Baluchistan province. These regions are infested with Taliban fighters.

The cross border attack from Pakistan occurred 11 days after US forces engaged a Taliban force as it retreated from Afghanistan’s Kunar province across the border into Pakistan's Mohmand tribal agency.

The engagement sparked an international incident. The US confirmed it killed eight Taliban fighters, while the Pakistani government said 11 Pakistani troops were killed. The Pakistani government expressed outrage over the strike.

Meanwhile, Afghan President Hamid Karzai threatened to strike at Taliban forces, including Baitullah Mehsud, inside Pakistan if the government could not contain the threat. The Pakistani government is negotiating a series of peace deal with the Taliban, while senior Taliban leaders vow to continue attacks inside Afghanistan.

Silverbullet
22 June 2008, 06:16
Is there a point to the posting of this article? You didn't post any commentary with it which is a no go on this board.

low country
22 June 2008, 14:20
Not trying to read into the article because it did not even mention responsible parties, but could it have been the Pakis in a little tit for tat or Taliban troops trying to disrupt things between the US/Afghans and the Paki govt?

Stay safe

agonyea
22 June 2008, 21:03
Here is some more info on recent cross border military operations, and indirect fire's that have resulted in return fires and military operations into Pakistan.
Pakistan has answered this insurection into their country by peace negotiations with the Taliban, and anybody else that they can cower down with.
The result has been a much more aggresive enemy operations in this corner of the world, as they are being protected by Pakistan.
So much like the North Vietnamese Army used to have bases in Cambodia. They launched many large operations into South Vietnam, and ran back into Cambodia as they were protected by the Cambodian government.

Here is a more recent news article from Rueters:

Rockets from Pakistan kill Afghan woman, 3 children

Karzai’s threat to Pakistani Taliban

Shells from Pakistan hit Afghan bases
21 Jun 2008


KHOST, Afghanistan (Reuters) - Rockets fired from Pakistan hit a village in eastern Afghanistan killing a woman and three children, Afghan officials said on Sunday, one of three cross-border attacks around the same time overnight.

Tension has mounted between the neighbors, with Pakistan saying 11 of its soldiers were killed in an airstrike by U.S. forces operating from Afghanistan on June 10. Afghan President Hamid Karzai threatened five days later to send troops across the frontier to hunt down Taliban militants based in Pakistan.

Rockets launched from about 300 meters (yards) inside Pakistani territory landed in a village near the eastern town of Khost on Saturday, close to a large NATO base, killing a woman and three children, provincial governor Arsala Jamal said. Eight people were wounded in the attack, most of them women.

"It was late evening. I was praying in the mosque when suddenly the sound of explosions started," said Aziz Khan, a driver who lives in the village. "I stopped my prayers and rushed outside ... I saw one of the rockets had hit my house.

http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSSP1478620080622

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