Afghan Taliban announce new wave of attacks against foreign forces

AfghanistanAfghan Taliban announce new wave of attacks against foreign forces

Afghan Taliban announce new wave of attacks against foreign forces

KABUL: The Afghan Taliban have announced that they will start their annual spring offensive against the US-led foreign forces in the war-torn country from Monday.

“If the invaders or their internal stooges believe that reducing the number of foreign forces will dampen our fervour, then they are sadly mistaken,” the Afghan Taliban said in a statement on Thursday.

The Afghan Taliban said that attacks during the coming fighting season would target US military bases, diplomatic missions and vehicle convoys.

The statement also warned that Afghan translators, government officials, politicians and judges would be targeted before the US-led NATO mission ends at the end of this year.

Must read

Recent News

Azerbaijani people commemorate National Leader Heydar Aliyev

Azerbaijani people commemorate National Leader Heydar Aliyev

0
Monitoring Desk: Every year Azerbaijani people on December 12 commemorate the death anniversary of Azerbaijani Great Leader Heydar Aliyev.Today, 21 years have passed since...

A doomed PTI is eager to talk with the government

0
Monitoring Desk: After trying various tactics, PTI is eager to talk to the government and is making every effort to get a positive response...
Hemani “Power Plus”

Hemani “Power Plus” become first Pakistani product registered in UAE

0
Monitoring Desk: Hemani “Power Plus” has become the first Pakistani product registered in the UAE.

Syrian disorder shows why the Armed Forces are essential for social order

0
DND Special ReportThe Middle East is volatile again and a kind of “Islamic Colour Revolution” has collapsed the state institutions where the swift...

Once again media bias targets Pakistan with unsupported content about PTI’s November 24 protest

0
Monitoring Desk: Pakistan has always been under the target of biased media a textbook example of how certain groups, individuals, and countries can try...
Advertisement