Just In |  Breaking News

Breaking News

Just In

Thursday, September 09, 2010

Taliban Chief Says Afghanistan Near To Victory

by Sunil Sonkar

By SUNIL Sonkar

September 09 — Mullah Omar, the elusive Afghan Taliban leader, claimed Islamist militants are near victory over Nato forces and has asked US President Barack Obama to withdraw the troops “unconditionally and as soon as possible.”

Omar, believed to be hiding in Pakistan, has not been in public since 2001. According to BBC, in a rare statement he said that the campaign by US and NATO forces has been a “complete failure” in Afghanistan. His statement came as a mark to the end of the Muslim month of fasting Ramadan and it was posted on jihadist websites.

The statement read, “The victory of our Islamic nation over the invading infidels is now imminent and the driving force behind this is the belief in the help of Allah and unity among ourselves… In the time to come, we will try to establish an Islamic, independent, perfect and strong system.”

He said that those behind the invasion of Afghanistan to overthrow Taliban in 2001 “admit themselves that all their strategies are nothing but a complete failure.”

The US troops are scheduled to march away Afghanistan in July 2011, but Obama administration said this would be only a token withdrawal and their forces will remain on Afghan soil till threat from the Taliban and al-Qaeda.

One Response to “Taliban Chief Says Afghanistan Near To Victory”

  1. dnews365 says:

    Taliban Chief Says Afghanistan Near To Victory – http://www.dailynews365.com/world-news/t...

Leave a Reply

Rectification

>
We express regret at the fact that the picture that DailyNews365.com had posted alongside the news article 'Sanjeev Saxena Arrested By Delhi Police' was not of Sanjeev Saxena, the assistant of Samajwadi leader Amar Singh, but his namesake who is the respected CEO at Actis Biologics Inc. Sanjeev Saxena, the CEO, is not associated to the 2008 cash-for-votes scandal in any way. We express our sincere apologies to Mr. Saxena.

World News

Loading ...