Nine dead in Taliban attack on Afghan base

At least nine Taliban insurgents, including three
suicide bombers have been killed by Afghan forces in a bid to prevent a complex
attack by the hardline Islamist group on a military base in southern
Afghanistan.
The 215 Maiwand Army Corps situated in Helmand
province came under attack in the early hours of Friday , said a senior
security official in Kabul, adding the attack was Taliban's third attempt to
overrun the strategic military installation in the past 48 hours.
"Afghan soldiers of 215 Maiwand Corps stopped
the Taliban from gaining control of the military compound, we have reports that
six Afghan soldiers were killed during the clashes," said a senior Afghan
security official.
Two other security officials confirmed that
members belonging to foreign forces present at the base were safe as the
Taliban could not breach walls of their compound.
The US has about 14,000 troops in Afghanistan as
part of a NATO-led mission, known as Resolute Support, and a separate US
counter-terrorism mission largely directed against militant groups like Islamic
State and al Qaeda.
In addition, some 8,000 troops from 38 other
countries in Resolute Support provide training and support for Afghan forces.
Helmand is seen as a strategic target for the
militants as large stretches of the province provides a source of much of the
world's illegal opium supply.
During more than a decade of international
intervention, Helmand was the deadliest province for foreign troops, claiming
nearly 1,000 lives.
The governor of Helmand province in a statement
said nine attackers including three suicide bombers were killed and Afghan
commando forces were busy with clearing the area.
An officer of the Afghan security forces in
Helmand said a suicide bomber had blown himself up in a dining room inside the
military corps compound and clashes continued.
The Taliban said their fighters were engaged in
clashes with US and Afghan forces at the Shorab airbase in Helmand province.
"Heavy clashes continue as tens of members of
the enemy forces had been killed or were wounded," Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, a
Taliban spokesman said in a statement.
Security officials in Kabul said clashes between
the Taliban and the government forces who are backed by foreign forces have not
subsided even as U.S. and Taliban officials were holding talks in Qatar to find
a negotiated solution to end the war in Afghanistan.