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News, July 2009

 
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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 
7 US Soldiers, 35 Afghani Soldiers, 6 Civilians Killed in Fierce War Attacks

July 6, 2009

Editor's Note:

The following news reports do not mention losses of Taliban fighters, which is illogical given the intensity of fighting in Afghanistan.

Seven NATO soldiers killed in Afghanistan

by Eltaf Najafizada Eltaf Najafizada –

July 6, 2009

MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan (AFP) –

Seven ISAF soldiers were killed in Taliban attacks in Afghanistan Monday as the Taliban announced it would resist a US Marine assault on its strongholds with a guerrilla campaign.

Four US soldiers, serving in NATO's International Security Assistance Force, were killed when a bomb blew up their vehicle as they drove over a bridge in the northern province of Kunduz, international and Afghan officials said.

"I can confirm that four ISAF soldiers were killed," an ISAF officer said on condition of anonymity. They died "due to an improvised bomb explosion in northern Afghanistan".

He would not comment on their nationalities but Afghan officials and the defence ministry of Germany, which is in charge of ISAF in the north, said they were US nationals.

"We have learnt today that four US soldiers were killed in the Kunduz region by an IED (improvised explosive device)," ministry spokesman Thomas Raabe told a press conference in Berlin.

The men were training the Afghan police, Kunduz intelligence chief General Abdul Majid Azimi told AFP.

Kunduz police chief Abdul Razaq Yaqoubi said two elderly Afghan men who were passing by were also killed and two children were wounded.

A spokesman for the Taliban, Zabihullah Mujahed, said his militia was responsible. The Hezb-i-Islami faction is also active in Kunduz, which has recently seen a spike in attacks.

ISAF announced separately that another two of its soldiers were killed by an bomb in southern Afghanistan, but it gave no further details, including their nationalities.

However, the attack was not in Helmand province where thousands of US and British troops have moved into Taliban  strongholds in the past weeks, a spokesman said.

Early Monday, a suicide attacker blew up an explosives-filled minivan outside a massive ISAF base outside the southern city of Kandahar.

It killed two Afghan truck drivers and wounded 11 other Afghans, including two soldiers, army corps commander General Shair Mohammad Zazai told AFP.

The blast was about 30 metres (100 feet) from an outer entrance to Kandahar Air Field and among vehicles queued up at a checkpoint on a road into Kandahar, about 10 kilometres (six miles) outside the city.

The base is a vast complex that houses thousands of foreign troops including some of the reinforcements sent by US President Barack Obama as part of a sweeping new war strategy.

Another Taliban spokesman, Yousuf Ahmadi, said his militia was responsible.

Last week, about 4,000 Marines were airlifted into Taliban areas in Kandahar's adjacent Helmand province in one of the biggest operations over the past eight years and part of Washington's new strategy against the (Taliban resistance to NATO forces).

Thousands of British troops meanwhile are carrying out a similar operation around the provincial capital, Lashkar Gah.

Ahmadi, the Taliban spokesman, announced Monday a new Taliban counter-offensive.

Operation Foladi Jal, Pashtu for "iron net," would teach the Marines a lesson "so they will never again dare to come into our areas", he told AFP by telephone from an unknown location, threatening "mines and guerrilla attacks".

The Marines and about 650 Afghan forces in Operation Khanjar (dagger) have reported little resistance, except in one area where officers have reported days of heavy fighting with one Marine killed.

Five British soldiers have been killed in Helmand in the past week, four of them by bombs.

7 US troops killed throughout Afghanistan

By Fisnik Abrashi, Associated Press Writer

July 6, 2009

KABUL –

Bombs and bullets killed seven American troops on Monday, the deadliest day for U.S. forces in Afghanistan in nearly a year — and a sign that the war being fought in the Taliban heartland of the south and east could now be expanding north.

Separately, Taliban fighters claimed on a militant Web site that they were holding an American soldier whom the U.S. military says they might have captured last week. The Taliban statement, however, did not include any proof, such as a picture or the soldier's name.

Four of the deaths Monday came in an attack on a team of U.S. military trainers in the relatively peaceful north, bringing into focus the question of whether the U.S. is committing enough troops to secure a country larger than Iraq in both population and land mass.

On a visit to Moscow, President Barack Obama said it's too soon to measure the success of his new strategy in Afghanistan. He said the U.S. can take another look at the situation after the country's presidential elections on Aug. 20.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said in some respects, progress has been "insignificant" in Afghanistan. He said it's hard to say how quickly the situation will improve.

Obama has ordered 21,000 additional American troops to this country, mainly in the south where Taliban fighters have made a violent comeback after a U.S.-led coalition topped them from power in late 2001. The U.S. expects 68,000 troops here by year's end, double last year's total but still half as many as now in Iraq.

The four American soldiers killed in the north died in a roadside bombing of their vehicle in Kunduz province, said Navy Chief Petty Officer Brian Naranjo, a U.S. military spokesman. The soldiers were training Afghan forces, he said.

Two Americans were killed in a roadside blast in southern Afghanistan, Naranjo said. And another American soldier died of wounds in a Monday firefight with militants in the east, a U.S. military spokesman said.

There were no further details on the incidents in the south and the east.

It was the deadliest day for American troops in Afghanistan since July 13, 2008, when 10 soldiers were killed — nine of them when Taliban fighters using small-arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades attacked a remote outpost in the village of Wanat near the Pakistani border.

The Taliban claim about holding a captured U.S. soldier came six days after a soldier was noticed missing during a routine check of his unit June 30. His body armor and weapon were found on the base.

Two U.S. defense sources have said the soldier "just walked off" post with three Afghans after he finished working. They had no explanation for why he left.

In southern Afghanistan, meanwhile, thousands of U.S. Marines continued with their anti-Taliban offensive in Helmand province. Some 500 Marines out of 4,000 participating in the operation moved into the Khan Neshin area, a Marine statement said Monday.

"This is the first time coalition forces have had a sustained presence so far south in the Helmand River valley. Khan Neshin had been a Taliban stronghold for several years before Afghan, and coalition forces arrived and began discussions with local leaders several days ago," the statement added.

In the southern province of Kandahar, meanwhile, a suicide car bomber blew himself up outside the outer gate of the main NATO base in the region, killing two civilians and wounding 14 other people.

Those wounded near the gates of Kandahar Airfield included 12 civilians and two Afghan soldiers, said Gen. Sher Mohammad Zazai, the top military commander for southern Afghanistan.

As the conflict intensifies, U.S. forces are under pressure to minimize civilian deaths in military operations. In an effort to reduce civilian losses, the new commander of U.S. and NATO forces, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, issued guidelines ordering troops to "scrutinize and limit" the use of airstrikes against residential compounds, which Taliban fighters often use as hideouts.

McChrystal says he hopes to produce a cultural shift in the military so that his troops' first priority will be protecting Afghan civilians, not using massive fire power. McChrystal's guidelines went into effect last week, and officials released a declassified version Monday.

The three directives are that airstrikes must be authorized and very limited but can be used in self-defense if troops' lives are at risk; troops must be accompanied by Afghan forces before they enter residences; and troops cannot go into or fire upon mosques or other religious sites, though this is already U.S. policy.

"We must avoid the trap of winning tactical victories — but suffering strategic defeats — by causing civilian casualties or excessive damage and thus alienating the people," McChrystal said in the statement.

Civilian deaths caused by U.S. and NATO military operations have long been a source of friction between President Hamid Karzai and the West. Such deaths have deeply angered Afghan villagers, eroding support for the Afghan government and international mission.

In the latest accusation, Daud Ahmadi, the spokesman for the governor of Helmand province, said a rocket hit a civilian house in Nad Ali district Sunday, killing four civilians and wounding four others.

Noor Mohammad, from Khoshal Keli village where the rocket hit, alleged that the rocket was launched by foreign forces.

NATO was not immediately available to comment on the report. British troops have been operating in the area.

A NATO helicopter, meanwhile, made an emergency landing in the southern Zabul province, a spokesman for the military alliance said. There were casualties among those on board, but Lt. Commander Chris Hall did not have details. The incident was not caused by insurgent fire, Hall said.

__

Associated Press reporters Jason Straziuso in Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan and Amir Shah in Kabul, and AP researcher Monika Mathur in New York, contributed to this report.

=====================

alemarah1.org reported the following news:

Mujahideen Attack US Troop Contingent in Paktika Province

Enemy Convoy Attacked in Sayed Abad

A Mujahideen Assassinate a Campaign Commander in Khust

Mujahideen Attack Doshi District Headquarters

13 police men killed in Helmand

Two hireling soldiers killed in Zabul

Four soldiers killed

Mujahideen destroy three vehicles and kill 12 soldiers.

Deputy-commander of Registan District Killed

Two hireling  soldiers killed, and two injured.

 



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