KABUL - General Scott Miller took command of US and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces in Afghanistan on Sunday, as worsening violence erodes hopes for peace in the war-torn country.
Miller, who has commanded special operations units in Afghanistan since 2013, succeeds General John Nicholson, who is rotating out of the post after more than two years.
The handover comes at a sensitive time in the 17-year war that has seen little progress by Afghan or US forces against the Taliban, Afghanistan's largest militant group.
Afghan and international players have been ratcheting up efforts to hold peace talks with the Taliban, which was toppled from power by US-led forces in 2001.
An unprecedented ceasefire in June followed by talks between US officials and Taliban representatives in Qatar in July fuelled hopes that negotiations could bring an end to the fighting.
But a recent spate of attacks by Taliban and the smaller but potent Islamic State group that left hundreds of security forces and civilians dead has almost extinguished that optimism.
"This is a tough fight," Miller acknowledged during an outdoor change of command ceremony in Kabul attended by top Afghan officials and foreign diplomats.
"There's no room for status quo, we cannot afford to be complacent. We must be aware of bias and easy conclusions - they don't exist here."
In a WhatsApp message to reporters, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid warned Miller would "fail like the other commanders". For the past two years Miller has headed up the secretive Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) and has lengthy experience working with some of America's most elite fighters.
Nicholson, who will return to the Pentagon, is the longest-serving US commander of NATO and American Forces in Afghanistan.
There had been concerns that militants would shower Kabul with mortar or rocket fire to spoil Sunday's handover, as they did during Afghan President Ashraf Ghani's speech on the first day of the Eidul Azha holiday last month. But the ceremony passed off uninterrupted.
Miller takes up his new role more than a year after US President Donald Trump unveiled his Afghanistan strategy, which increased the US troop presence and now includes a renewed push to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table.
But there are fears that Trump is growing frustrated with the pace of progress in the country.
The Taliban have long insisted on direct talks with Washington and refused to negotiate with the Afghan government, which they see as illegitimate. There is speculation that another meeting between US and Taliban representatives could be held this month.
"We know the military component is only one part of this conditions-based strategy," Miller said. He added that it was necessary to "create space for the political process" to end the war.
Separately, Miller confirmed in a statement that a US airstrike in the eastern province of Nangarhar on August 25 killed the leader of the Islamic State group in Afghanistan.
Abu Saad Orakzai, also known as Saad Arhabi, was among several people killed in the strike. IS first emerged in Afghanistan around 2014.
Currently there are about 14,000 US troops in Afghanistan, providing the main component of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization mission there to support and train local forces.
Helicopter crash kills 12
At least 12 people were killed, including two Ukrainians, when a helicopter crashed in northern Afghanistan on Sunday, Afghan and foreign officials said.
The aircraft, owned by a Moldovan company, was carrying 14 people incl1uding 11 members of Afghan security forces when it crashed in the northern province of Balkh, the Moldovan aviation authority said in a statement.
The two Ukrainians killed were crew members, the statement said. A third Ukrainian crew member survived the crash. An Afghan security source confirmed the death toll. Another Afghan security source put the death toll at 13, with only the foreign pilot surviving the accident.
The helicopter was carrying munitions and exploded on impact, burning bodies "beyond recognition", the Afghan sources said. Afghan officials earlier put the death toll at three.
The helicopter crashed due to "technical problems" shortly after taking off in Dehdadi district, Nazer Khuda Pamiri, deputy commander of Afghan forces in northern Afghanistan, told AFP.
It was transporting Afghan security forces from a military base to the volatile northwestern province of Faryab.
The helicopter caught fire after it hit the ground, Pamiri confirmed.
Defence ministry deputy spokesman Mohammad Radmanish said the helicopter belonged to a private company and had been hired by the ministry.