Editor in Chief: Moh. Reza Huwaida Friday, March 29th, 2024

Afghan Commandos Graduate, Ready to Lead Night Raids

Afghan  Commandos Graduate, Ready  to Lead Night Raids

KABUL - Afghan Army Commandos are ready to take responsibility for the contentious night raids independently of NATO-led forces, the army Special Forces chief General Sayed Abdul Karim said at the seventh graduation ceremony of Afghan commandos in Kabul Thursday.
The commandos were fit to launch operations against insurgents in Afghanistan, Karim told the people attending the graduation of the 144 new commandos, saying the insurgents did not have the ability to resist and fight against the Afghan special forces.

His comments were a pointed reference to the ongoing negotiation between the US and Afghanistan over army night raids on Afghan homes, undertaken to combat insurgent activity.

Director of Infrastructure for the Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Mohammad Moein Faqir added that the support of Afghan people for the national forces was necessary for in order to be able to destroy the insurgency.

"Your enemies don't want you to have a peaceful Afghanistan so be decisive and irreconcilable [to their ideas]," he said.
Karim said the seventh graduation has brought the total number of Afghan soldiers with special forces training to more than 1000.

US officials said Tuesday that an agreement between the US and Afghanistan over the night raids was close, even "days away". The deal is expected to put Afghans in the lead for night raids and call for Afghan judges to issue warrants for the operations, officials said.

Afghan forces currently lead about 40 percent of the night raids, according to Pentagon press secretary George Little. (Tolo News)