Afghan South: Different War Than in North

For all the Pentagon’s talk about waging an unorthodox war, the campaign in northern Afghanistan has been fairly conventional, culminating today in the fall of the city of Kunduz. But the situation in southern Afghanistan, where hundreds of United States marines are now deployed near the Taliban’s last stronghold, Kandahar, is strikingly different.

The Pentagon lacks a strong proxy ground force in the south and has a more demanding mission there: to take the fight to the adversary’s heartland and roust Osama bin Laden, his Qaeda fighters and the Taliban from their sanctuaries and pursue them, even if they flee into caves and mountains that make Afghanistan one of the most rugged places in the world. NY Times