By Louis Charbonneau UNITED NATIONS, Oct 14 (Reuters) - The insurgency in Afghanistan has spread beyond Taliban strongholds in the south and east while the number of attacks in the country has reached a six-year high, a top U.N. envoy confirmed on Tuesday. Violence in Afghanistan this year is worse than at any time since U.S.-led and Afghan forces toppled the militant Islamist Taliban in 2001 and fears are growing that the West is losing the military campaign and the support of ordinary Afghans. "In July and August we witnessed the highest number of security incidents since 2002," U.N. special envoy to Afghanistan Kai Eide told the U.N. Security Council. It was a nearly 40 percent rise over the same period in 2007, he said. Eide said the insurgency has spread beyond the south and east and extended to provinces around Kabul. There has also been an increase in attacks on civilians, including aid-related and humanitarian personnel, he added. However, Eide sharply criticized what he said were overly pessimistic assessments of the situation. "I would really caution against the gloom and doom statements that we've seen recently," he said. "Many of them really go too far." On the positive side, Eide said there has been a significant improvement in relations between Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan. Afghan, U.S., NATO and U.N. officials say that Taliban and al Qaeda militants move across Afghanistan's long and porous border with Pakistan. This makes Islamabad a key partner if the war against the Afghan insurgency is to be won, they say. Afghanistan's U.N. Ambassador Zahir Tanin acknowledged that the situation has grown worse. "Despite hard work on the part of international coalition forces and Afghans alike, terrorism appears to be on the rise again," he told the council. "The Taliban burn down schools, stamp out reconstruction, and butcher civilians," Tanin said. "They attack roads and regions around Kabul, hampering international humanitarian relief. Ordinary people are increasingly their targets." However, he warned news organizations against excessive pessimism in their depictions of his country. "We should be careful with what we say about Afghanistan," he said, adding that the Taliban have used "some recent statements and reports" in an attempt to convince the Afghan population that international community's resolve is wavering. "Our assessments and reports must be stronger in reporting destruction and brutality caused by the Taliban," Tanin said. British commander Brig. Mark Carleton-Smith told a British newspaper earlier this month that the war against the Taliban could not be won. His comments were widely reported. (Editing by Anthony Boadle)
A labourer takes a nap on a bridge near to the newly inaugurated 450-megawatt hydropower project located at Baglihar Dam on the Chenab river which flows from Indian Kashmir into Pakistan, ...