By reporting our dead as NATO troops, this administration avoids
broadcasting the daily body count they so relished when GWB was President.
God bless our troops and their families.

 

See here:
<http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/05/26/7-nato-service-members-killed-afgha
nistan>
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/05/26/7-nato-service-members-killed-afghan
istan

 7 Americans Killed in Explosion in Afghanistan

Published May 26, 2011

KABUL, Afghanistan -  Nine NATO service members were killed Thursday in
Afghanistan, including seven U.S. troops among eight who died when a
powerful bomb exploded in a field where they were patrolling on foot,
officials said.

Two Afghan policemen also died and two others were wounded in the explosion
in the mountainous Shorabak district of Kandahar province, 12 miles from the
Pakistan border, said Gen. Abdul Raziq, chief of the Afghan border police in
the province.

"Two months ago, we cleared this area of terrorists, but still they are
active there," Raziq said.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the blast.

"A bomb was planted for them in a field," Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef
Ahmadi told The Associated Press in a telephone call.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to disclose the information, confirmed that seven American
service members died in the bombing.

The international military coalition reported that one additional NATO
service member was killed Thursday when a helicopter crashed in the east.

U.S. officials said seven American soldiers were killed in the bombing. NATO
said an eighth soldier was also killed, but his nationality was not
immediately released.

It was the deadliest day for coalition forces in Afghanistan since April 27,
when a veteran Afghan military pilot opened fire at Kabul airport and killed
eight U.S. troops and an American civilian contractor.

Thursday's blast was the worst single attack against NATO forces by one of
the Taliban's crude, homemade bombs since October 2009. Seven soldiers from
a unit based in Fort Lewis, Washington, died Oct. 27, 2009 when their
vehicle hit a roadside bomb in Arghandab district, also in Kandahar
province.

"It was a big, powerful blast," said Gen. Tefeer Khan Ghogyaria, who
oversees Afghan border police in three provinces in the south. "A container
of explosives was placed in the ground and it exploded when the NATO forces
were passing. They were on a foot patrol."

Roadside bombs killed 268 American troops in Afghanistan last year, a 60
percent increase over the previous year, even as the Pentagon employed new
measures to counter the Taliban's makeshift weapon of choice. Defense
officials attributed the rise in casualties to the surge in U.S. forces in
Afghanistan last year.

The number of U.S. troops wounded by what the military terms improvised
explosive devices also soared, according to the most recent U.S. defense
figures. There were 3,366 U.S. service members injured in IED blasts -- up
from the 1,211 hurt by the militants' crudely made bombs in 2009, the
figures show.

Officials with the Pentagon's Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat
Organization, based outside Washington, has said that additional explosive
sensors, bomb analysts and specially trained dogs have helped battle the
roadside bombs.

Last year, the Pentagon provided $495 million to buy 34 tethered
surveillance blimps that give troops a bird's eye view of certain areas and
sent in more unmanned surveillance aircraft so route-clearance patrols would
have the benefit of full-motion video. The Pentagon also delivered more than
5,000 hand-held bomb detectors, improved training and sent additional
equipment to Afghanistan to counter the threat.

Southern and eastern Afghanistan are the most volatile areas in Afghanistan.

Tens of thousands of U.S., NATO and Afghan forces have been working for
months to rout the Taliban from their strongholds in the south. The Taliban
have retaliated with targeted assassinations of Afghan officials and attacks
on Afghan and coalition forces. Eastern Afghanistan, along the Pakistan
border, also has been the scene of heavy violence.

On May 1, insurgents declared the start of a spring offensive against NATO
and the Afghan government. NATO has been expecting the Taliban to stage a
series of spectacular and complex attacks, and the group has already carried
out a number of them recently.

The effectiveness of the Taliban's long-awaited spring campaign, code-named
Badr after one of the Prophet Muhammad's decisive military victories, could
affect the size of President Barack Obama's planned drawdown of U.S. troops
in July. Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. and NATO commander in
Afghanistan, has said the size of the withdrawal will depend on conditions
on the ground.

The alliance has committed itself to handing over control of security in the
country to Afghans by 2014.

Thirty-eight international service members have been killed so far this
month, including at least 13 Americans. So far this year, 189 coalition
troops have died in Afghanistan.



Read more:
<http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/05/26/7-nato-service-members-killed-afgha
nistan/#ixzz1NmROqQiS>
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/05/26/7-nato-service-members-killed-afghan
istan/#ixzz1NmROqQiS



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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