World | Afghanistan

Afghan Taliban claim massive foreign troops toll

The Taliban have long exaggerated their military successes, but their figures for 2008 may be the militia's most startling claims yet.

  • AP
  • Published: 23:35 January 5, 2009
  • Gulf News

Kabul: The Taliban have long exaggerated their military successes, but their figures for 2008 may be the militia's most startling claims yet.

The Taliban claim their forces last year killed 5,220 foreign troops, downed 31 aircraft, destroyed 2,818 Nato and Afghan vehicles and killed 7,552 Afghan soldiers and police.

Though third-party observers can rarely confirm casualty claims on the Afghan battlefield from the Taliban, the Afghan government, the US or Nato, the Taliban's 2008 numbers would appear to be far from the truth.

Nato's member countries announce all troop deaths, providing names, ages and hometowns and how the soldiers were killed. According to an Associated Press tally of those announcements, 286 foreign forces died last year in Afghanistan, including 151 American and 51 British troops.

The Taliban's toll is almost 20 times higher.

Despite the inflated toll, the Taliban have had more success recently. Violence in Afghanistan has spiked in the last two years, and Taliban militants now control wide swaths of countryside.

In response, the US is planning to pour up to 30,000 more troops into the country this year.

Exaggeration

The insurgents' exaggerations are designed to boost morale inside the Taliban and to attract financing from donors sympathetic to their cause, a US military official and a Taliban expert said.

"They put out this propaganda in order to raise capital to continue their operations," said Colonel Jerry O'Hara, a US military spokesman.

Vahid Mojdeh, the author of a book on the Taliban, said the exaggerated claims help the insurgents recruit new fighters.

"The Taliban needs volunteers to carry out suicide attacks, so they want to show they are killing a lot of people," Mojdeh said.

Propaganda has long been a key element in war, particularly in conflicts where the sides are fighting to win support from the population.

The Taliban exaggerate US or Nato deaths in order to persuade average Afghans that the insurgents are winning, while US and Nato spokesmen highlight construction projects.

Is the Afghanistan issue being forgotten? Do you see any positive changes taking place in the near future?

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