Prison break showed Taliban strength
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, Aug. 27 (UPI) -- A June prison break
that freed 900 prisoners has pointed out the renewed strength of
Taliban forces and the weakness of the Afghan government, observers
say.
An inability to secure the southern city of Kandahar
adequately has been felt across the country and made the task of
NATO forces, which have already suffered more deaths in 2008 than at
any time since 2001, more difficult, The New York Times reported
Wednesday.
The government of President Hamid Karzai is so weak that the
Taliban could have seized control of Kandahar on the night of the
prison break, one Western diplomat in Kabul reportedly said. They
did not expect the government and the NATO reaction to be so weak,
he said.
Many Afghans also are reportedly losing confidence.
"We don't have a system here, the government does not have a
solution," said Abdul Aleem, who fought the Taliban and now faces
death threats.
Nevertheless he still backs the presence of international
forces in Kandahar, saying that without them Afghanistan's situation
would be even worse.
"If we did not have foreigners here, I don't think the
Afghan National Army or police would come out of their bases," he
said.
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