World | Afghanistan Afghanistan's Insurgency Endures Attacks highlight security decline By Dustin Lushing Posted Aug 14, 2008 12:26 PM CDT Copied An Afghan police officer inspects the wreckage of a car used by suicide bomber after an attack on a NATO convoy in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, Aug 11, 2008. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul) The insurgency in Afghanistan is mushrooming, and targeting the refurbished highway that provides a weak connection between the country's ethnic halves, the New York Times reports. A series of deadly attacks in June has exposed the tribulations of the United States' 6-year-old effort to defeat the Taliban. The provinces surrounding the Afghan capital have grown more unstable in recent months as local government and police units fail to assert control over the region, and the international military presence remains undermanned. And the country's most important supply route—a symbol of US commitment to the country—is riddled with IEDs and constantly ambushed. Read These Next Americans have thoughts on aging. Essayist quit drinking at age 71, writes that it's never too late. Administration orders states to halt full SNAP payments. Indictment: Pitchers struck deal with bettors on what to throw. Report an error