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  • 7 US troops killed in latest Afghanistan fighting

    By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN, AP

    KABUL, Afghanistan -Seven U.S. troops have died in weekend attacks in Afghanistan's embattled southern and eastern regions, while officials found the bodies Sunday of five kidnapped campaign aides working for a female candidate in the western province of Herat.
    Two servicemen died in bombings Sunday in southern Afghanistan, while two others were killed in a bomb attack in the south on Saturday, and three in fighting in the east the same day, NATO said. Their identities and other details were being withheld until relatives could be notified.
    The latest deaths bring to 42 the number of American forces who have died this month in Afghanistan after July's high of 66. A total of 62 international forces have died in the country this month, including seven British troops.
    Fighting is intensifying with the addition of 30,000 U.S. troops to bring the total number of international forces in Afghanistan to 140,000 — 100,000 of them American. Most of those new troops have been assigned to the southern insurgent strongholds of Helmand and Kandahar provinces where major battles are fought almost daily as part of a gathering drive to push out the Taliban.
    The five campaign workers were snatched Wednesday by armed men who stopped their two-vehicle convoy as it drove through remote countryside. Five others traveling in the vehicles had earlier been set free, according to a man who answered the phone at the home of candidate Fawzya Galani and declined to give his name.
    Residents of Herat's Adraskan district reported finding the bodies early Sunday. They were later transported to the local morgue for identification by family members, district chief Nasar Ahmad Popul said.
    No one has claimed responsibility for the killings, although Taliban insurgents have waged a bloody campaign of murder and intimidation against candidates and election workers in hopes of sabotaging the Sept. 18 parliamentary polls the 249 seats in the lower house.
    In a similar attack in Herat, male parliamentary candidate Abdul Manan was shot and killed Saturday on his way to a mosque by an assassin traveling on the back of a motorcycle.
    Meanwhile Sunday, two suicide bombers attempted to climb over the back wall of a compound housing the governor of the far western province of Farah, but were spotted by guards and shot, provincial police Chief Mohammad Faqir Askir said.
    The men's vests exploded, although it wasn't clear if they detonated themselves or because they were hit by bullets, Askir said.
    The explosions blasted a chunk out of the wall and blew out windows in the compound, but there were no other reports of deaths or injuries, he said.
    NATO said eight insurgents were killed in joint Afghan-NATO operations Saturday night in the province of Paktiya, including a Taliban commander, Naman, accused of coordinating roadside bomb attacks and the movement of ammunition, supplies and fighters.
    Automatic weapons, grenades, magazines and bomb-making material were found in buildings in Zormat district along the mountainous border with Pakistan. Afghan leaders frequently complain that Pakistan is doing too little to prevent cross-border incursions and shut down insurgent safe havens inside its territory.
    Just to the south in Khost province, U.S. and Afghan troops raised the death toll among insurgents to more than 30 in simultaneous attacks Saturday by about 50 fighters on Forward Operating Base Salerno and nearby Camp Chapman, where seven CIA employees died in a suicide attack in December.
    Insurgents wore replica American uniforms and at least 13 had strapped themselves into suicide bomb vests, NATO said.
    The early morning raids appeared to be part of an insurgent strategy to step up attacks in widely scattered parts of the country as the U.S. focuses its resources on the battle around Kandahar.
    The Afghan Defense Ministry said two Afghan soldiers were killed and three wounded in the fighting, although NATO said there had been no deaths among the defenders. Four U.S. troops were wounded, NATO officials said.
    U.S. and Afghan officials blamed the attack on the Haqqani network, a Pakistan-based faction of the Taliban with close ties to al-Qaida. In follow-up operations Sunday, a Haqqani commander involved in the attacks and two other insurgents were detained in Khost's Sabari district, NATO said.
    NATO also said it launched an airstrike in the northern province of Kunduz on three insurgents, including a commander with the Taliban-allied Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan responsible for recruiting foreign fighters and leading attacks. At least one of the three was killed and another wounded, the alliance said.
    NATO has stepped up efforts to provide security to allow an election whose outcome will be generally accepted as credible, hoping that will help stabilize the nation's fractious politics that are helping fuel the violence.
    Yet frictions have continued to mar the relationship between the government of President Hamid Karzai and its international partners, largely over the knotty question of endemic official corruption.
    On Saturday, the government criticized U.S. media reports that numerous Afghan officials had allegedly received payments from the CIA — including one who reportedly took a bribe to block a wide-ranging probe into graft.
    A presidential office statement did not address or deny any specific allegations, but called the reports an insult to the government and an attempt to defame people within it.
    The statement came the same day as a top graft-battling Afghan prosecutor said he had been forced into retirement.
    Deputy Attorney General Fazel Ahmed Faqiryar has complained that Attorney General Mohammad Ishaq Aloko and others are blocking corruption cases against high-ranking government officials. He said Aloko wrote a retirement letter for him earlier in the week and that Karzai accepted it.
    Officials said Sunday that Faqiryar had been retired because he was 72, two years over the mandatory retirement age.
    Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
    2010-08-29 13:25:55

    7 US troops killed in latest Afghanistan fighting

    How many more of our troops have to die before we pull out? How many more billions or trillions do we need to spend before we pull out?

  • #2
    I'd say we're doing a pretty damn good job Monte. The taliban is on it's heels. More worried about fighting than plotting more terrorist attacks.

    Keep crying though

    Comment


    • #3
      Dang, I heard that they shot crazy and were not accurate at all... 7 gah.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by kbsooner21 View Post
        I'd say we're doing a pretty damn good job Monte. The taliban is on it's heels. More worried about fighting than plotting more terrorist attacks.

        Keep crying though


        Oh yeah they are on their heals! LMFAO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
        Nothing is as far away as one minute ago.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by kbsooner21 View Post
          I'd say we're doing a pretty damn good job Monte. The taliban is on it's heels. More worried about fighting than plotting more terrorist attacks.

          Keep crying though
          You're full of shit. The Taliban has only gotten stronger. There are more of them now fighting us, because we invaded their Country and won't leave. It also puts everyone in the USA at more risk of another attack.

          I cannot believe how anyone can think by the USA troops still being over there is not making it more and more easier for the Taliban to recruit new members.

          I would rather see us pull our troops out and save the lives of the soldiers we have left. Put the defense mechanisms up over here and quit wasting trillions on this war.

          Comment


          • #6
            Toll from Afghan base raids rises

            Toll from Afghan base raids rises

            By Jonathon Burch
            KABUL | Sun Aug 29, 2010 10:26am EDT
            (Reuters) - The NATO-led force in Afghanistan said on Sunday more than 30 insurgents, including at least 13 suicide bombers, were killed when foreign and Afghan troops repelled al Qaeda-linked fighters who attacked two bases.

            Despite the presence of almost 150,000 foreign troops, violence across Afghanistan is at its worst since the Taliban were ousted by U.S.-backed Afghan forces in late 2001.

            Insurgents have launched increasingly brazen attacks around the country in a bid to topple the government and force foreign troops to leave.

            The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said on Sunday four more of its troops had been killed, taking to seven the number killed in the last two days in the south and east. An ISAF spokesman said all seven were Americans.

            At least 2,040 foreign troops have been killed since the war began, more than 60 percent of them Americans, according to website iCasualties: Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom Casualties and figures compiled by Reuters. Of those, at least 252 have died in the last three months.

            The spiraling toll comes as public opinion turns against the war in the United States, where President Barack Obama faces rocky mid-term Congressional elections in November. Obama has also promised an Afghanistan strategy review in December.

            On Saturday, ISAF said it had killed 24 insurgents as its troops fought off the attacks on the two bases together with Afghan troops. On Sunday, it raised the toll to at least 30. Four ISAF troops were wounded in the attacks but none killed, it said.

            Many of those killed belonged to the al Qaeda-linked Haqqani network, it said. The Taliban said on Saturday about 30 of its fighters launched the attacks in Khost province, near the eastern border with Pakistan where foreign forces have stepped up operations against a resurgent Taliban.

            The Haqqani network, led by the aging guerrilla commander Jalaluddin Haqqani, is mainly active in the southeast of the country. While thought to be loosely allied to the Taliban, the Haqqanis often carry out separate operations. A Haqqani network commander was killed in an air strike called in after the raids.

            On Sunday, ISAF said foreign and Afghan troops captured a Haqqani commander and two other militants involved in the raids.

            NATO also said it had carried out an air strike in northern Kunduz on Saturday aimed at a senior commander of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, who was responsible for controlling foreign insurgents in the area. One insurgent was killed.

            Kunduz province has seen significant inroads by insurgents as they pushed out of traditional strongholds in the south and east over the past two years.

            Saturday's attacks in Khost were the latest in a string of such raids in recent months. Similar raids have been launched on heavily fortified bases in Bagram to the north of the capital, Kandahar in the south, and Kabul itself.

            As Taliban-led insurgents launch increasingly brazen attacks around Afghanistan, foreign troops have also stepped up operations, especially in the south, leading to a sharp rise in foreign troop deaths.

            Civilians have borne the brunt of the fighting, with thousands of ordinary Afghans killed as they are caught in the crossfire. Civilian deaths were up by 31 percent in the first six months of this year, according to a United Nations report.

            (Editing by Paul Tait and Jon Hemming)

            Toll from Afghan base raids rises | Reuters

            Comment


            • #7
              Amid bloody Afghan battle, name-calling on the rise

              (For more on Afghanistan, click [ID:nAFPAK])

              By Jonathon Burch

              KABUL Aug 29 (Reuters) - The Afghan Taliban are angry that the man whose job it is to kill their fighters has claimed to be making progress; so angry that they want to hold an unprecedented news conference to talk about it.

              The Islamist group said on Sunday they wanted to call together international media based in Afghanistan to discuss the assertion made by General David Petraeus, the commander of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

              Violence in Afghanistan is at its worst since the Taliban were overthrown by U.S.-backed Afghan forces in late 2001 as both sides step up their attacks, resulting in heavy insurgent casualties and soaring foreign troop deaths.

              But in recent months both sides have also stepped up the propaganda battle, flooding international and Afghan outlets with media statements.

              On Sunday, the Taliban -- who banned television during their rule of Afghanistan from 1996-2001 -- described Petraeus's recent comments to NBC television and the BBC about pockets of progress being made as "deceitful business" and "organised propaganda".

              In the statement emailed to media outlets -- computers were also proscribed during their rule -- the Taliban, or Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, called for a news conference so it could reveal the "reality" to the world.

              "The Islamic Emirate, in an attempt to provide the world with the awareness of the facts and figures and what the reality is, suggest holding a press conference of the world media correspondents in Afghanistan," the statement said.

              (For more on Afghanistan, click [ID:nAFPAK])

              By Jonathon Burch

              KABUL Aug 29 (Reuters) - The Afghan Taliban are angry that the man whose job it is to kill their fighters has claimed to be making progress; so angry that they want to hold an unprecedented news conference to talk about it.

              The Islamist group said on Sunday they wanted to call together international media based in Afghanistan to discuss the assertion made by General David Petraeus, the commander of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

              Violence in Afghanistan is at its worst since the Taliban were overthrown by U.S.-backed Afghan forces in late 2001 as both sides step up their attacks, resulting in heavy insurgent casualties and soaring foreign troop deaths.

              But in recent months both sides have also stepped up the propaganda battle, flooding international and Afghan outlets with media statements.

              On Sunday, the Taliban -- who banned television during their rule of Afghanistan from 1996-2001 -- described Petraeus's recent comments to NBC television and the BBC about pockets of progress being made as "deceitful business" and "organised propaganda".

              In the statement emailed to media outlets -- computers were also proscribed during their rule -- the Taliban, or Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, called for a news conference so it could reveal the "reality" to the world.

              "The Islamic Emirate, in an attempt to provide the world with the awareness of the facts and figures and what the reality is, suggest holding a press conference of the world media correspondents in Afghanistan," the statement said.

              Amid bloody Afghan battle, name-calling on the rise | News by Country | Reuters

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              • #8

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                • #9
                  Gotten stronger huh? Lmfao

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