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Post by steevo on Apr 9, 2007 16:58:58 GMT
" Traveling with the Taleban" by David Loyn, dated Tuesday, 24 October 2006. The BBC’s David Loyn has had exclusive access to Taleban forces mobilised against the British army in Helmand Province in southern Afghanistan.
There is no army on earth as mobile as the Taleban.
I remember it as their secret weapon when I travelled with them in the mid-1990s, as they swept aside rival mujahideen to take most of the country.
Piled into the back of open Toyota trucks, their vehicle of choice, and carrying no possessions other than their weapons, they can move nimbly.
The bare arid landscape of northern Helmand suits them well.
After one hair-raising race across the desert last week, patrolling the large area where they can move at will, they screamed to a stop at a river bank.
It was sunset, and time to pray before breaking the Ramadan fast they had kept since sunrise.
Before praying, they washed in a dank-looking pool at the side of the almost-dry river bed.
Afghanistan has been in the grip of a severe drought for several years, but the lack of clean water does not seem to concern these hardy men.
They clean their teeth with sharpened sticks taken from trees, and sleep with only the thinnest shawls to cover them.
They have surprised the British by the ferocity of their fighting and their willingness to take casualties.
Their belief in the imminence of paradise means that few exhibit fear.Hat tip: LGF news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6081594.stm
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Post by Teddy Bear on Apr 9, 2007 21:01:17 GMT
Steevo you're really outdoing yourself with these finds. I wish we had a 'puke' emoticon like this one for stories such as these. They relate the heroism of our enemies, but not our own soldiers. They've reached a new low - even for the BBC. This is major. I'm going to let the Telegraph know about this story if they don't already, as a follow up to yesterday's article.
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