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SPIN BOLDAK, Afghanistan - Steeling for a spring offensive, the Taleban said today they had sent 1,000 suicide bombers to relatively quiet northern Afghanistan, a day after a suicide blast targeted Vice President Dick Cheney.
The United States and some NATO nations, led by Britain, are pouring troops in to battle the offensive and to try to crush the insurgents in what analysts say is the crunch year for both sides after the bloodiest 12 months since the Taleban fell in 2001.
At least 23 people, including an American soldier and a South Korean serviceman, died in Tuesday's suicide car bombing at the main US base in Afghanistan, Bagram, 60 km north of Kabul in an area that has seen little violence since 2001.
"We reacted in a very short span of time to attack the base," Taleban commander Mullah Hayatullah Khan said.
"They would have launched a major guerrilla attack on the base as the Taleban are prepared for any sacrifice to kill such an important person and a big infidel."
Cheney was never in danger from the attack, which occurred just inside a perimeter gate, and was whisked to a bomb shelter immediately after the blast. He later went ahead with talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai in Kabul before leaving for Oman.
More suicide attacks feared
Khan repeated earlier Taleban warnings the insurgents had 2,000 suicide bombers ready -- plus more than that in training -- but this time said 1,000 had been sent to northern Afghanistan, which has seen relatively little violence.
More than 4,000 people died in fighting last year, mostly in the Taleban's southern and eastern heartland, bordering Pakistan.
The Taleban say they will step up suicide bombings as part of their return to conventional guerrilla fighting after suffering heavy losses in pitched battles against NATO in 2006.
Almost unheard of in Afghanistan until 2005 when there were 21 suicide bombings, the number jumped to 139 last year as Afghan rebels copied tactics from Iraq.
President George W. Bush said this month quashing the Taleban and restoring security in Afghanistan was vital to the United States' own security. He pledged 3,200 more troops and billions of dollars more for reconstruction and Afghan security forces.
Britain, whose foreign secretary, Margaret Beckett, was in Kabul today, pledged an extra 1,400 troops this week because other NATO nations refused.
Beckett said the extra British troops, which will soon outnumber London's deployment in Iraq, will help stability.
"I would say, in all sincerity, that none of us are doing enough to tackle the security problems," she told journalists.
"Because, if we were doing enough then we would have had a great deal more success than we have had so far."
She said more troops would help bring the security needed for reconstruction -- bringing water, power and healthcare to Afghans -- but some fear more foreign troops mean more fighting.
"This fighting has ruined us. We don't want them," 50-year-old beggar Shafia said in Spin Boldak near Pakistan.
"We lost our children and relatives. When the foreigners came, we thought they would bring peace and prosperity but now the situation is worse than before.
"The Taleban were good Muslims. They used to preach Islam and its laws, but now dacoits (bandits) and thieves are ruling.
"What use are these foreigners and their big tanks and planes when our children can't get enough food?"
But a 38-year-old shopkeeper in Zabul, who did not want to give his name, said more foreign troops were needed.
"It will definitely make a difference if troops also engage in reconstruction work instead of just fighting Taleban," he said.
"Afghan people are more interested in a resolution of their problems, not in fighting."
- REUTERS