‘Two US service members were killed and two died of wounds sustained in a single improvised explosive device attack in southern
No further details were immediately available but thousands of US troops are fighting in southern
The latest military deaths come as Obama debates whether to send thousands of additional troops to the impoverished country on top of 21,000 extra forces he committed after taking office this year.
In a grim assessment of a war with military casualties at record levels, the commander of the 100,000 US and Nato troops in
ISAF’s commander in southern
He also called for more Afghan army and police plus civilian workers to help development and reconstruction projects.
Improvised explosive devices (IEDs) — homemade, cheap and difficult to detect — have become the Taliban’s weapon of choice against foreign troops, as they look to regain influence across the country.
An AFP toll based on a tally by the independent website icasualties.org puts foreign military fatalities this year at 414 — the bloodiest since US-led operations to oust the Taliban regime began in late 2001.
The
Obama has said the top goal of any new policy would be consistent with current
Compounding the military difficulties is speculation that Afghan President Hamid Karzai could be forced into a run-off without securing an outright majority at elections in August scarred by fraud allegations.
A fraud probe has trimmed Karzai’s vote share to just 47 per cent, The Washington Post said Friday.
The Independent Election Commission gave Karzai 54.6 per cent in its preliminary results, which would secure him for a second five-year term.
But
On the ground, ISAF said two civilians lost their lives during a joint operation with Afghan police that killed a number of militants suspected of mounting attacks in eastern Ghazni province.
‘During the operation, as militants attacked the joint force, a woman and school-aged girl were accidently killed in the crossfire,’ the statement said.
It added: ‘It is unclear if the enemy militants or the joint force are responsible for the deaths.’ ISAF spokesman Colonel Wayne Shanks said they were ‘genuinely sorry’ when Afghan civilians were killed but took steps to prevent civilian casualties.
Separate operations in southern Paktika province and Wardak, in the west, saw a number of suspected militants killed or detained, ISAF added.— AFP
Tags: afghanistan violence







