Taliban Commanders Boast Of Victory Against NATO-Led Troops
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

QUETTA, Pakistan — Taliban commanders boasted of a victory against NATO-led forces yesterday, a day after British troops withdrew from a strategic area in southern Afghanistan.
The withdrawal of 120 troops from Musa Qala in Helmand province followed a pact reached a month ago between British commanders and tribal elders to allow hundreds of locals who had fled the fighting to return to their homes.
Mullah Gul Agha, said the withdrawal signaled a victory for his forces. “We have won, and the guests have been defeated,” he said.
The Taliban claims that it struck a deal with Musa Qala’s tribal elders agreeing to cease violence if the security in the district was transferred to local people selected by the elders and if the British agreed to withdraw.
Mullah Agha, who said he was speaking by satellite telephone from Musa Qala, said the tribal elders also agreed to consult the Taliban on issues related to vice and virtue.”The elders have agreed to consult us on matters relating to such crimes as theft and adultery,” he said.
Another local Taliban commander, Mullah Noorullah, said: “The Taliban have emerged victorious.”
A NATO spokesman in Kabul, Mark Laity, said the decision to withdraw the troops had come about “because of the sustained period of calm,” adding that Afghan security forces would be in charge of security.