*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~* { Sila lawat Laman Hizbi-Net - http://www.hizbi.net } { Hantarkan mesej anda ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] } { Iklan barangan? Hantarkan ke [EMAIL PROTECTED] } *~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~* Undilah PAS : MENENTANG KEZALIMAN & MENEGAKKAN KEADILAN ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ MOSCOW, Dec 2 (AFP) - The war in Chechnya is becoming an increasingly bloody affair for Russian troops who had grown used to stringing together victory after victory since the start of the ground offensive two months ago. But a fierce Chechen counter-attack codenamed "Sword of Justice" has rocked the Russian military back on its heels, and seen secessionist forces wrest control of two towns from federal troops. On Thursday Russia suffered its biggest losses in a single day since federal troops rolled into the rebel republic on October 1. Up to 50 Russian soldiers and officers were killed and 100 wounded Thursday in a battle for control of the Chechen stronghold of Argun, the AVN military news agency cited federal sources as saying. The Russians suffered their first major setbacks in the east of the breakaway republic, where Grozny said its forces had captured Novogroznensky and Noibyora, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) east of the capital. Moscow admitted losing control of Novogroznensky but insists it has since been recaptured, a claim the Chechens hotly dispute. Its first battlefield successes have signalled a change in tactics by the Chechen military, but the counter-offensive does not yet pose a real threat to Moscow, whose forces still control more than half the renegade republic. Federal troops have Grozny 80 percent surrounded, with forward units only two kilometres from the outskirts of a city which is bombarded day and night. Most major towns in the republic, including the second city Gudermes, are already under Russian control. Nevertheless, Moscow has been forced to concede some spectacular Chechen successes in recent days, including the annihilation of a platoon of paratroopers on reconnaissance in the Vedeno areas in the rebel-held southern mountains of Chechnya. That operation left at least 12 Russians dead, or between 40 and 200 according to the Chechens, who have shown video footage purporting to show the aftermath of the battle. The Russian advance has stalled in the past few weeks around Urus-Martan, some 20 kilometres (12 miles) southwest of Grozny, a key town which federal troops must take if they are to completely encircle the Chechen capital. A relentless barrage of tank, rocket and artillery fire, combined with intensive air strikes, have so far failed to dislodge Chechen fighters from the town, which is reported to have been 80 percent destroyed by the onslaught. Hundreds of Russian soldiers have been killed in fierce battles near the town and the nearby settlement of Alkhan-Yurt, according to Grozny. Even in zones in theory controlled by Russian troops, the situation remains far from satisfactory. Military commanders complain of constant incursions in the northern Naurskaya and Shelkovskaya districts captured in early October, and Goragorsky, in the northwest, captured on October 15. The situation has become so serious that Defence Minister Igor Sergeyev on Thursday announced security would be beefed up in Russian-held areas of Chechnya in an effort to end the incursions. Moscow could need up to three more months to bring the republic to heel, he admitted Wednesday. Russia says it has restricted its losses so far to 250 dead, a figure servicemen's support groups say underplays the true casualty levels. The Soldiers' Mothers Committee said recently the figure was nearer 600. Moscow's troops rolled into Chechnya on October 1, vowing to set up a security zone in the republic, held to be a base for "Islamic terrorists." Moscow blames Muslim extremists for two armed incursions into the southern Russian republic of Dagestan over the summer, and a wave of apartment bombings in September that killed 292 people. However, Russia has made little secret of its desire to secure complete control of the rebel republic, which won de facto independence from Moscow since the 1994-96 which left federal forces humiliated. Copyright (c) 1999, AFP ------------------------------------------------------------ Get your FREE web-based e-mail and newsgroup access at: http://MailAndNews.com and http://MailAndNews.co.uk Create a new mailbox, or access your existing IMAP4 or POP3 mailbox from anywhere with just a web browser. ------------------------------------------------------------ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ( Melanggan ? 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