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Afghan army takes on Taliban in first solo offensive

The Afghan army is waging its largest-ever solo offensive against the Taliban, hoping to strike a decisive blow ahead of the spring fighting season and prove it can rout the insurgents without the aid of US and NATO combat troops.

Afghan troops have been slowly pushing up through a fertile river valley in the southern Helmand province, with special forces mounting nighttime helicopter raids into mud brick compounds and ground troops gradually advancing across the poppy fields that in past years have furnished the insurgents’ main cash crop.

US and British troops suffered some of their biggest losses of the decade-long war here, seizing territory that was later lost by ill-equipped and poorly trained Afghan forces.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has vowed to break the grim cycle, and the latest offensive is widely
seen as a test for his efforts to overhaul the army and police since taking office in September.

Ghani was personally involved in planning the operation, which is codenamed Zolfiqar meaning double-edged sword and which began on February 10, according to Maj. Gen. Kurt Fuller, deputy chief of staff for US and NATO operations in Afghanistan.

Ghani heads to Washington later this month, where he is expected to seek enhanced US military backup, particularly air support.

“This is an incredibly important operation,” said a Western diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss the secret operation.

“This is Ghani’s attempt to demonstrate to the U.S. and the US Congress that Afghan ground forces are able to take the lead and conduct offensive operations if they have the right enablers to support them.”

US and Afghan officials say local security forces are so far proving they can take the fight to the Taliban without the aid of foreign combat troops. 
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