As provincial governor Mohammad Gulab Mangal toured the battle-scarred terrain, an Afghan soldier raised the red, black and green Afghan flag over the battered market.
But Mangal joined Afghan commanders in saying it was too early to declare Marjah "cleared" completely of militants or their mines.
"From the military point of view, one cannot set an exact timeline but work to clear mines continues," he said.
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs quoted an up-beat assessment by General Stanley McChrystal after the US military chief briefed President Barack Obama's war cabinet via video link.
"The response that we got from General McChrystal today was that the operation was going well... because of the time that had been taken to shape it with local authorities," Gibbs said, adding that "extra caution" was being taken to avoid civilian casualties.
Gibbs also hailed the arrest in neighboring Pakistan of top Taliban military commander Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar as a "big success" for collaboration on security.
OCCPATION CASUALTIES
For its part, NATO said two more of its soldiers had been killed in Operation Mushtarak "Together", bringing to six the total number of occupation soldiers killed in the offensive since it started on Saturday.
Both soldiers died in combat with the Taliban, one of them on Wednesday and the other on Tuesday, the International Security Assistance Force said.
The soldiers' nationalities were not disclosed, in line with NATO practice.
In all, 78 occupation soldiers have died in Afghanistan since the start of 2010.
The bazaar in Marjah was a forlorn sight -- shops and buildings were badly damaged from fighting and barbed wire sealed off roads believed to be heavily mined.
"People have come out of their homes and into a desert, without any food or water. We are living in very hard conditions," resident Abdul Rashid said.
On other hand, Afghan interior ministry spokesmen, Zemerai Bashari, said about 1,100 Afghan police were deployed in Marjah as part of plans to set up a civilian administration.
Amnesty International says up to 10,000 people have fled the conflict area and thousands more remain trapped by the fighting.
"There was fighting, planes were flying overhead all the time, there were tanks all over the place, bullets were hitting our houses," Wali Jan told the BBC.
The top Afghan general commanding Operation Mushtarak accused the Taliban of hiding behind human shields.
"They have taken people hostage. Our troops have seen them putting women and children on the roofs of houses and firing from behind them," said General Moheedin Ghori, commander of the 4,400 Afghan troops taking part.
"We have strict orders not to fire at civilian areas," he added.
A Taliban spokesman denied their fighters were exploiting civilians.
"We have never used civilians as human shields, we do not use our own people as human shields," Yousuf Ahmadi told AFP by telephone from an undisclosed location. "We are there, standing against the invaders in direct fighting."
Afghan and British soldiers sweeping through villages in the Nad Ali area, where Marjah is located, found bombs buried by roadsides, in fields, hanging from trees, even embedded in walls, an Afghan army colonel said this week.
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