Saturday, November 27, 2010

Afghanistan War News Briefs -- November 27, 2010

Afghans return to their villages after receiving gifts for the Muslim holiday of Id al-Adha, the Feast of Sacrifice, in Nawa, Afghanistan, Nov. 17, 2010. U.S. Marines assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, provided security while U.S. and Afghan soldiers distributed supplies as a goodwill gesture. U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Mark Fayloga

U.S. Now In Afghanistan As Long As Soviets Were -- L.A. Times

The last Red Army troops left in 1989, driven out after nine years and 50 days by U.S.-backed fighters known as mujahedin. Despite contrasts, the U.S. and Soviet wars have common narrative elements.

Reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan, and Moscow — As wartime days go, Friday was a fairly quiet one in Afghanistan. Helicopters skittered across the sky; convoys rumbled along desert roads; soldiers in mountain outposts scanned the jagged peaks around them.

But one thing set the day apart: With its passing, the length of the U.S. military's campaign in Afghanistan matched that of the Soviet Union's long and demoralizing sojourn in the nation.

Read more ....

More News On Afghanistan

Nato in Afghanistan longer than Soviet Union: analysis -- The Telegraph
US troops pass Soviets' Afghan stay -- Al Jazeera
Grim Milestone: American Presence in Afghanistan Equals Length of Soviets' War -- ABC News

Afghanistan: Suicide bombs target police in Paktika -- BBC
Afghan bombers target police -- Al Jazeera
Suicide attack at Afghan police HQ kills 12 -- Yahoo News/AP
Suicide Attacks At Afghan Police HQ Kill 12 Officers -- Radio Free Europe
Four policemen killed in suicide attack in Afghan east -- Yahoo News/AFP
17 insurgents killed in Afghanistan: NATO -- Hindustan Times

More Ups than Downs in Afghan Counterinsurgency Fight -- U.S. Department of Defense
Shiite deal gives militants new Afghan access -- AP
Afghan police learn to shoot, patrol -- Washington Times

Taliban imposter several inches shorter than man he was impersonating -- The Telegraph
Reports: British Spy Agency Paid Taliban Impostor -- Voice of America
Duping of MI6 reveals Afghan coalition flaws -- BBC

Afghanistan Rejects U.S. Aid for Bank Audits -- Wall Street Journal
Afghanistan: a history of occupation -- The Telegraph
The Man Who Would Be Taliban -- Tobin Harshaw, New York Times
Talks are the only route in Afghanistan -- Ahmed Rashid, L.A. Times
Coddled VIPs don't see real Afghanistan -- Don Martin, National Post

FACTBOX-Military deaths in Afghanistan -- Reuters

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