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World
Mar 22, 2010
Taleban given training in Iran
LONDON - HUNDREDS of insurgents have been trained in Iran to kill Nato forces in Afghanistan, two Taleban commanders told a British Sunday newspaper. The unnamed commanders told The Sunday Times that Iranian officials paid them to attend three-month courses in desert training camps in southeast Iran. They were taught how to carry out complex ambushes and lay improvised explosive devices (IEDs), the roadside bombs which have been responsible for many of the deaths of British troops in Afghanistan. One of the commanders told the newspaper that the military's crackdown in Pakistan was forcing Taleban leaders to turn to Iran for assistance and training. 'The military is pressuring the Taleban in Pakistan.
It is certainly harder to reach places that were once easy to get into. I think more of my fighters will travel to Iran for training this year,' he said. A commander from Wardak in central Afghanistan said: 'I found some elements of the training in Iran very useful, especially the escape and evasion techniques I was taught.' Both men said Iran also supplied them with weapons, often paying nomads to smuggle ammunition, mines and guns across the desert and mountain passes between Iran and western Afghanistan. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has publicly backed his Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai and the pair held talks in Kabul this month. But US and British officials have accused Iran of giving covert backing to the Taleban. -- AFP
Mar 22, 2010
Taleban given training in Iran
LONDON - HUNDREDS of insurgents have been trained in Iran to kill Nato forces in Afghanistan, two Taleban commanders told a British Sunday newspaper. The unnamed commanders told The Sunday Times that Iranian officials paid them to attend three-month courses in desert training camps in southeast Iran. They were taught how to carry out complex ambushes and lay improvised explosive devices (IEDs), the roadside bombs which have been responsible for many of the deaths of British troops in Afghanistan. One of the commanders told the newspaper that the military's crackdown in Pakistan was forcing Taleban leaders to turn to Iran for assistance and training. 'The military is pressuring the Taleban in Pakistan.
It is certainly harder to reach places that were once easy to get into. I think more of my fighters will travel to Iran for training this year,' he said. A commander from Wardak in central Afghanistan said: 'I found some elements of the training in Iran very useful, especially the escape and evasion techniques I was taught.' Both men said Iran also supplied them with weapons, often paying nomads to smuggle ammunition, mines and guns across the desert and mountain passes between Iran and western Afghanistan. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has publicly backed his Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai and the pair held talks in Kabul this month. But US and British officials have accused Iran of giving covert backing to the Taleban. -- AFP