US drone targets 8 Daesh militants in East Afghanistan

US troops in Afghanistan have rushed to help members
of the Daesh Takfiri terrorist group following a Taliban operation to purge the
terrorists from the country’s east, according to Taliban militants.
The Taliban militant group said in a statement on
Friday that US soldiers “saved” Daesh members as well as their local leaders by
helicopters from a siege they had been trapped in the eastern Afghan province
of Kunar.
“The US troops saved them from the siege by
helicopters,” the statement said, adding that the Taliban had been launching an
anti-Daesh operation for one week in Kunar and had surrounded the terrorist
outfit’s important individuals.
A large number of the Daesh terrorists were rescued
by choppers while fleeing a battlefield with Taliban last year in the northern
province of Jawzjan.
The Economic Times estimated in a recent report that
around 10,000 members of the Takfiri terrorist group were present in
Afghanistan and the number was growing on Washington’s watch.
In recent years, Daesh has established a foothold in
eastern and northern Afghanistan. The terrorist group has mostly been
populating Nangarhar, from where it has carried out high-profile brutal attacks
at major population centers across the country.
Last February, three months after the group's defeat
was announced in Iraq and Syria, the Associated Press reported that the US
military was pulling its forces from a base in Iraq and shifting them to
Afghanistan.
The report flew in the face of US President Donald
Trump's campaign promises to end Washington's Afghanistan intervention.
The US and its allies invaded Afghanistan and
toppled a ruling Taliban regime some 17 years ago. That ongoing war has failed
to bring stability to the country despite the presence of thousands of foreign
forces.
Today, around 14,000 US troops remain in Afghanistan,
half of them assigned to what Washington insists are counter-terrorism
missions.
According to an official US report last year, the
central government in Kabul is currently controlling a little more than 50
percent of the country, down from 72 percent in 2015, with the rest remaining
in Taliban's control.