
Taliban strikes deep into helmand province
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Taliban insurgents have made further gains in Helmand this week, seizing a strategically significant district headquarters on Monday despite bombing by US warplanes and resistance from the
Afghan army. Militants overran Helmand's Musa Qala district on Monday – an area that was originally taken from them by British and Afghan forces in 2008. US warplanes bombed the
advancing Taliban over the weekend, killing 40 fighters, but the insurgents regrouped and overran Musa Qala, forcing district government forces to retreat, Newsweek reports. SUBSCRIBE TO THE
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news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of
The Week delivered directly to your inbox. "Afghan special forces, police and commandos have been deployed to Helmand in order to retake Musa Qala district. Foreign air strikes are
backing our forces," said Afghan defence ministry spokesman Dawlat Waziri. The Taliban victory follows a withdrawal last week by Afghan soldiers from Nawzad – a neighbouring district
captured by British and American troops during the war. The withdrawal, in conjunction with the assault on Musa Qala, gives the Taliban control of three districts in northern Helmand as well
as partial control of other parts of the region, including Kajaki, which allows them to disrupt the power supply from a large US-built hydroelectric dam. WHAT HAPPENS NEXT? A senior
official in the Afghan Army’s 215 Maiwand Corps told the New York Times that "foreign forces" would be providing air support as the Afghan army moved to take Musa Qala back.
However, the loss of control of the region raises further questions over the achievements of US and UK forces in Afghanistan. As the UK ended combat operations in Afghanistan last year, the
restoration of security in the most densely populated areas – the "green zone" – either side of the Helmand river was regarded as one of the allies' most significant
successes, the BBC says. Consequently, the return of fighting to the region will be seen as a major blow as the Taliban's power continues to increase and poppy growing remains at record
levels.