U.S. deaths in Afghanistan headed for another record



By Nancy A. Youssef and Jonathan S. Landay | McClatchy Newspapers
 
WASHINGTON — With the deaths of four U.S. soldiers Tuesday, the U.S.-led NATO 
coalition in Afghanistan now has lost more troops this year than in all of 
2008, and August is on track to be the deadliest month for American troops 
there since U.S. operations began nearly eight years ago. 
 
The numbers reflect the rising pace of combat in Afghanistan and come at a 
difficult time, just as Army Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the U.S. commander in 
Afghanistan, is considering asking for more U.S. troops even as opinion polls 
show that a majority of Americans think the war in Afghanistan isn't worth the 
cost.
 
Underscoring the deteriorating situation, a massive explosion late Tuesday 
shook the southern city of Kandahar, leveling dozens of businesses as people 
were breaking the daylong fast of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. 
 
Local officials said at least 37 civilians were killed and another 100 were 
injured.
Afghans also are awaiting results from the Aug. 20 presidential election as the 
top candidates claim the lead. A runoff will be held if no candidate wins more 
than 50 percent of the nationwide vote; the protracted uncertainty could lead 
to more violence. Partial results released Tuesday showed President Hamid 
Karzai running slightly ahead of his nearest competitor, with 40 percent of the 
counted votes.
 
In July, 45 U.S. troops died in Afghanistan, the highest monthly toll this 
year. So far in August, 40 Americans have died, many in the south, and Pentagon 
officials say privately that with nearly a week left in the month, they expect 
August to exceed July's number. Americans make up the majority of the 63 
coalition troops killed so far this month; 75 coalition soldiers died in July.
 
In 2008, total coalition deaths were 294, 155 of whom were Americans; the 2009 
total through Tuesday was 295, of whom 172 were Americans.
There are currently 63,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
 
The four Americans who died Tuesday were killed when an explosion hit a convoy 
in Kandahar province. U.S. officials didn't disclose the identities of the 
soldiers or of their unit and did not say where the convoy was precisely when 
it was struck.
 
Senior U.S. military leaders have warned that troop deaths were likely to rise 
as the Obama administration sent an additional 17,500 troops and 4,000 trainers 
to Afghanistan. Those forces began arriving in Afghanistan earlier this summer, 
including thousands of Marines who launched a major offensive in southern 
Helmand province. Roughly 6,000 of those forces are still en route.
 
Under McChrystal, the U.S. is expanding its presence into parts of southern 
Afghanistan, including Kandahar and Helmand provinces, where coalition forces 
have never had enough troops to displace the Taliban.
 
Kandahar city is the country's second-largest and the spiritual capital of the 
Pashtuns, the ethnic group that comprises virtually all of the Taliban. And 
more than 90 percent of Afghanistan poppy production comes out of Helmand.
 
"We are not surprised," said a senior Pentagon officer who asked for anonymity 
so that he could discuss the casualty figures candidly. "We knew this would 
happen."
The increase in casualties comes at a time that public support for the war 
appears to be eroding. A Washington Post-ABC News polls released last week 
found that for the first time, a majority of Americans don't think the war is 
worth fighting.
 
Members of Congress are expressing concerns about U.S. progress in a country 
known as the graveyard of empires.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a proponent of sending more troops to Afghanistan on 
Sunday called the trends in Afghanistan "very alarming and disturbing" on ABC 
News, while Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., a member on the Foreign Relations 
Committee, told his home state's Appleton Post-Crescent newspaper that he wants 
a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. forces.
 
"I think it is time we ought to start discussing a flexible timetable when 
people in America and Afghanistan and around the world can see where we intend 
and when we intend to bring our troops out," Feingold said, according to the 
paper.
 
Interviews with Afghans show that they are fed up as well. Many say they don't 
want help from the U.S., the Taliban or their central government; they just 
want to be left alone.
Haji Agha Lalai, the head of the provincial peace and reconciliation commission 
and a Kandahar provincial council member, visited the scene shortly after 
Tuesday night's bombing. In a telephone interview, he said he was told by a 
police officer that a large tanker truck was moving through the neighborhood 
when the explosion occurred.
"The houses along a 20-meter (66 foot) section of roadway were completely 
destroyed," he said.
The bombing happened as there are growing charges of massive fraud in the 
presidential election, which the U.S. and its allies had hoped would produce a 
stable government that would cooperate closely on the Obama administration's 
new strategy for defeating the Taliban-led insurgency.
Preliminary results released Tuesday by the Independent Election Commission 
showed that with 10 percent of polling stations counted, President Hamid Karzai 
was running slightly ahead of his closest challenger and former foreign 
minister, Abdullah Abdullah, 40.6 percent to 38.7 percent.
Just before the IEC announced the results, Abdullah intensified his charges 
that Karzai had used his control over the government to orchestrate a campaign 
of "wide-scale fraud."
Using stronger language than in previous days, Abdullah warned that he'd "not 
allow a big fraud to determine the outcome of the election" and would "not make 
deals" in return for dropping his charges, like accepting a top post in the new 
government.
Six other candidates issued a joint statement warning that the volume of 
rigging complaints had many people "seriously questioning the legitimacy and 
credibility of the results."
(Youssef reported from Washington and Landay reported from Kabul. McClatchy 
special correspondent Hashim Shukoor in Kabul contributed to this article.)
MORE FROM MCCLATCHY
Shackles and blindfold for freed detainee on his way home
Observers cautious about declaring Afghan vote a success
Afghan vote carries big risk for U.S. fight against Taliban





Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
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