9 US Soldiers Killed In Afghanistan

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JASON STRAZIUSO | July 13, 2008 09:48 PM EST | AP

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Face covered Taliban militants pose before they execute two Afghan women in Ghazni province, Afghanistan, on Saturday, July 12, 2008. Taliban fighters told Associated Press Television News that the two were executed for allegedly running a prostitution ring catering to U.S. soldiers and other foreign contractors at a U.S. base in Ghazni city. (AP Photo/Rahmatullah Naikzad)

KABUL, Afghanistan — A multi-pronged militant assault on a small, remote U.S. base close to the Pakistan border killed nine American soldiers and wounded 15 Sunday in the deadliest attack on U.S. forces in Afghanistan in three years, officials said.

The attack on the American troops began around 4:30 a.m. and lasted throughout the day. Militants fired machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars from homes and a mosque in the village of Wanat in the mountainous northeastern province of Kunar, NATO's International Security Assistance Force said in a statement.

"Although no final assessment has been made, it is believed insurgents suffered heavy casualties during several hours of fighting," NATO said in a statement.

U.S. officials say militant attacks in Afghanistan are becoming more complex, intense and better coordinated than a year ago. Monthly death tolls of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan surpassed U.S. military deaths in Iraq in May and June. And last Monday, a suicide bomber attacked the Indian Embassy in Kabul, killing 58 people in the deadliest attack in the Afghan capital since 2001.

U.S. officials are considering drawing down additional forces from Iraq in coming months, in part because of the need for additional U.S. troops in Afghanistan. U.S. officials have said they need at least three more brigades in Afghanistan _ or more than 10,000 troops.

NATO confirmed nine of its soldiers had been killed and 15 wounded. A Western official said the nine dead were Americans, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the troops' nationalities. Four Afghan soldiers also were wounded, NATO said.

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Lt. Col. Rumi Nielson-Green, the top U.S. military spokeswoman in Afghanistan, said she could not comment because the fighting was ongoing.

The attack was the deadliest for U.S. troops in Afghanistan since June 2005, when 16 American troops were killed _ also in Kunar province _ when their helicopter was shot down by a rocket-propelled grenade. Those troops were on their way to rescue a four-man team of Navy SEALs caught in a militant ambush. Three SEALs were killed, the fourth was rescued days later by a farmer.

The latest assault came at a time of rising violence in Afghanistan. Also on Sunday, a suicide bomber targeting a police patrol killed 24 people, including 19 civilians, while U.S. coalition and Afghan soldiers killed 40 militants elsewhere in the south.

More than 2,300 people _ mostly militants _ have died in insurgency-related violence this year, according to an Associated Press tally of official figures. Attacks in eastern Afghanistan are up 40 percent this year compared with last year.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned during a visit to Kabul last week that there are more foreign fighters, including al-Qaida members, in Pakistan's tribal areas, militants who cross the border and launch attacks against U.S. and Afghan troops.

Mullen has said he hopes improved security in Iraq will allow troops to be shifted this year from Iraq to Afghanistan, where violence is rising.

Violence in Iraq is at its lowest level in four years and Iraqi forces are taking on more responsibility, trends that could allow Gen. David Petraeus, the top American commander in Iraq, to recommend to President Bush in September that he resume a troop withdrawal that is being put on hold this month so Petraeus has time to assess the overall situation. A top Bush aide, Ed Gillespie, said Sunday that withdrawing more troops from Iraq after that assessment always has "been a possibility."

Another cause for concern in Afghanistan is the high casualty tolls for civilians killed in violence. This month, an Afghan government commission found that U.S. aircraft killed 47 civilians during a bombing run in Nangarhar province, while a separate incident in Nuristan province is alleged by an Afghan officials to have killed 22 civilians.

The tolls have prompted the International Committee of the Red Cross this week to ask all sides to show restraint and avoid civilian casualties. But violence continued around the country on Sunday.

A suicide bomber on a motorcycle blew himself up next to a police patrol in the southern province of Uruzgan, killing 24 people. The bomb attack on a police patrol at a busy intersection of the Deh Rawood district killed five police officers and 19 civilians, wounding more than 30 others, said Juma Gul Himat, Uruzgan's police chief. Most of those killed and wounded were shopkeepers and young boys selling goods in the street, he said.

Elsewhere, Taliban militants executed two women in central Afghanistan late Saturday after accusing them of working as prostitutes on a U.S. base.

The women, dressed in blue burqas, were shot and killed just outside Ghazni city in central Afghanistan, said Sayed Ismal, a spokesman for Ghazni's governor. He called the two "innocent local people."

Taliban fighters told Associated Press Television News the two women were executed for allegedly running a prostitution ring catering to U.S. soldiers and other foreign contractors at a U.S. base in Ghazni city.

1st Lt. Nathan Perry, a U.S. military spokesman, said he had not heard allegations "anything close to that nature."

Meanwhile, at least 40 militants were killed following an attack on Afghan and U.S.-led coalition forces in Helmand province, the coalition said in a statement. The militants attacked the combined forces near Sangin on Saturday from "multiple concealed and fortified positions," the coalition said. Thirty "enemy boats" and several small bridges have been destroyed on the Helmand River during two days of fighting, it said.

Also Sunday, a soldier with NATO's International Security Assistance Force died in a roadside blast in Helmand province, a statement said. The soldier's nationality was not released and it wasn't clear if the death was connected to the two-day battle.

In the north, a soldier serving with ISAF died of wounds caused by an explosion Saturday, the military alliance said in a statement. The statement did not give any further details of the explosion. The soldier's nationality was not disclosed.

There are nearly 53,000 troops from 40 nations serving in the ISAF in Afghanistan.

___

Associated Press writers Noor Khan in Kandahar and Rahim Faiez and Fisnik Abrashi in Kabul contributed to this report.

 
 

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- Knowledgeseeker See Profile I'm a Fan of Knowledgeseeker

i wander what Bush have to say about this one.....
Bush is just a sad leader

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 PM on 07/14/2008
- demigod See Profile I'm a Fan of demigod

I have always opposed the war in Afghanistan, because I knew we would end up bogged down there surrounded by hostiles, being bled to death just like the Soviets, the British, the Greeks, and everybody else who ever attacked Afghanistan. Those people do not want to live in this century - they want Allah and that is ALL. We cannot change them, we cannot force them, we cannot run their country. We need to get OUT of Afghanistan, because attacks like this one will never stop. The Afghans do not see any difference between us and the Soviets, we are invaders and they want us gone. The Soviets had three times the troops there that we have now - and they LOST. We should learn from their tragic experience and not stay there ten years. This is one of the reasons the Soviet Union fell - because the people no longer trusted the military after their boys kept coming home in boxes. Just like Viet Nam. Doen't anybody remember ANYTHING ?????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 07/14/2008
- FawkesNews See Profile I'm a Fan of FawkesNews

Bush 2004: "As a result of the United States military, Taliban no longer is in existence."

www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/09/20040927-4.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:00 PM on 07/14/2008
- SeriousBlack See Profile I'm a Fan of SeriousBlack

And why isn't this the top story on huffpost instead of "Bailout Nation"?

For pete's sake!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 07/14/2008
- abouttime See Profile I'm a Fan of abouttime

Russia lost 20,000 soldiers trying to defeat a country that really never has been but a Tribal territory with phoney boundaries. Afganistan has 47 languages and as many cultures, and has gotten along with out the US for millinia. War hawk neocons used to laugh at the "stupid" Russians thinking they could conquer and occupy that diverse area. However, It was the U.S. whose brilliant idea it was to train Bin Laden and Co. in CIA camps set up in Afaganistan to defeat Russia. We invented our enemies and demonstrate the arrogant stupidity we ridiculed the Russians for. Now OUR soldiers are coming home with trauma, no legs, brain injuries and in coffins.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 07/14/2008
- mikegoodyearaz85338 See Profile I'm a Fan of mikegoodyearaz85338

But yet Obama supports this war, so get use to having more casultiers in Afghanistan and possible Pakistan. Don't ignore the fact that Obama claims that Iraq distracted us from the real war.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 07/14/2008
- landmine See Profile I'm a Fan of landmine

Well said.

Now the rest of the story:

Why both Russia and the USA wanted the pile of rocks in the first place......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 07/14/2008
- dhinds See Profile I'm a Fan of dhinds

For the USA it was 9/11, of course.

But after destroying Al Queda's Afghan training camps and removing the Taliban government that sheltered them, is there really anything to gain by maintaining a military presence on the ground? (Particularly since they've regrouped in Pakistan and carrying out an air strike there would be hard to justify unless it's in response to an attack on the USA itself - like 9/11).

IOW, Pakistan is a much more serious ball of wax. Does the USA really intend to take on a nuclear power -and the whole Arab world- just because the military outpost of it's own invading force was attacked?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 07/14/2008
- dhinds See Profile I'm a Fan of dhinds

Are there nations that don't have phony boundaries? (Perhaps a nation state)?

The Taliban, Al Queda, Islamic fundamentalists, Arab nationalists and everyone else unhappy with the USA's military presence in the Middle East and willing to act on it can disperse and redeploy to shift their attacks to any poorly guarded area in the region and there's little the USA can do about it except provide them with more targets, because (aside from the mandate), the USA lacks the resources to protect much more than the USA itself.

Further more, it's precisely the arrogant, uninvited and unaccountable insistence on invading,occupying and dominating other independent sovereign nations that justifies making the USA's presence in those countries a target.

Not a single soldier volunteered his or her service to be misused in this manner. Protect our national interests and human resources here where they're needed and bring our troops home!

End this tragic, wasteful, destructive, inhuman and counterproductive war now!

Impeach Bush and Cheney for intentionally misleading Congress and the American public

http://impeachment.kucinich.us/petition/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 07/14/2008
- plainsman See Profile I'm a Fan of plainsman

We don't want to win wars. They must go on in perpetuity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 AM on 07/14/2008
- Nochnoi See Profile I'm a Fan of Nochnoi

I love it when those who dwell under the bridge run away when faced with the facts..... scurrying for talking points.... I can not wait until November.... : )

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 AM on 07/14/2008
- Kalima See Profile I'm a Fan of Kalima

Roll on November but before that, let us witness some debates to make up for the
restlessness of waiting in the summer heat. I saw that your comment has appeared
on the "New Yorker" thread as did mine, as few minutes ago. I thought it was doomed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 AM on 07/14/2008
- Nochnoi See Profile I'm a Fan of Nochnoi

Oh my gosh... I made that comment maybe seven hours ago! And yes... let the debates begin... sooner the better.... enough of the MSM propagating their nonsense....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 AM on 07/14/2008
- Marichu See Profile I'm a Fan of Marichu

The situation for the Afghan woman has improved slightly since the fall of the Taliban. Despite some positive changes (their Constitution states equality for men as well as women) many problems still exist. Afghan women continue to be victims of gender apartheid. Domestic violence, forced marriages and economic problems are behind an increase in suicides and self-immolation. Many are also dying and suffering due to a lack of health care services. Afghanistan is second only to Sierra Leone in terms of women dying in childbirth.
Life remains miserable for many Afghan women especially those in the Afghan countryside.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 07/14/2008
- peacekitten See Profile I'm a Fan of peacekitten

afghanistan.

the "forgotten" war. for everyone except those who are there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 07/14/2008
- HumeSkeptic See Profile I'm a Fan of HumeSkeptic

It is more than just forgotten. It's purpose is no longer clear. But there are chickehawks, some on this thread, who would tell you that it is fine for these soldiers to die. It is what, they say, is war all about.

If a war becomes just about people getting killed, ours or theirs, it is then an utterly immoral war. And it is then supported by the utterly depraved, such as the chickenhawks who would brag about their imaginary service to our country on an anonymous blog, in their desperate attempt to gain respectability for their depravity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 AM on 07/14/2008
- peacekitten See Profile I'm a Fan of peacekitten

(part 1 of 1)

sorry it has taken so long for me to reply.

i would beg to differ with you, my friend, about the purpose of the afghanistan war no longer being clear. if you are sitting in the boardroom of the world's five largest oil companies, its purpose is perfectly clear. the fourteen american military bases established in afghanistan so far run perfectly along the line of the caspian sea pipeline. that pipeline allows access not only to iraq and iran but some of the largest of the russian deposits as well. the servicing contracts for those fields has already gone to schlumberger of france, but we still control the pipeline, and intend to continue to do so.

there is also the issue of the resurgence of the poppy crops there. it was no accident, and now that huge amount of drug money, instead of being used to fund only our covert operations, as it did during the iran/contra scandal, it is now being used to fund terrorism on the part of other countries besides our own.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:26 AM on 07/14/2008
- Rumplestiltskin See Profile I'm a Fan of Rumplestiltskin

2 old friends peace, don't generalize.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 AM on 07/14/2008
- peacekitten See Profile I'm a Fan of peacekitten

hello my friend. point taken.

you do have to admit though, that it is nowhere near as "glamorous" a war as iraq. or as much of a lightning rod. it's nowhere near as visible a war as iraq, yet it grows more dangerous and violent by the day. the taliban has re-emerged, as strong as ever, women are being brutalized and beheaded for something as ridiculous as appearing in public, burka and all, with a man who is not their husband, but merely a friend. what's worse, it seems as if the brutal spectacles of hangings and beheadings in the public soccer arena are seen as *entertainment*. i simply cannot fathom that in my wildest dreams.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:59 AM on 07/14/2008
- Kalima See Profile I'm a Fan of Kalima

fishsandwichesr2good See Profile I'm a Fan of fishsandwichesr2good
You can "see"?! News to me. Have you stepped out into the light?

Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 07/13/2008

No, I could see from your rambling attempt at German, your claim to be of German origin
sounds like a whopper, because most people can speak some of the language of their
parents or their grandparents, we hear it every day growing up. As for seeing the light,
why are you posting only in the potholes?
I think you need to step out into the light yourself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 AM on 07/14/2008
- wadenelson1 See Profile I'm a Fan of wadenelson1

Kalima as in Planet of the Apes ???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 07/14/2008
- Kalima See Profile I'm a Fan of Kalima

No, as in Kali's ma, ok?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 AM on 07/14/2008
- HumeSkeptic See Profile I'm a Fan of HumeSkeptic

That fish creature sounds like Neo. She's probably drunk again. Ignore her, Kalima.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 AM on 07/14/2008
- Kalima See Profile I'm a Fan of Kalima

I know it's her but I wasn't going to let her have the last word just because
it was out of sight.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 AM on 07/14/2008
- Rumplestiltskin See Profile I'm a Fan of Rumplestiltskin

You never listed your service to the country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 07/14/2008
- Rumplestiltskin See Profile I'm a Fan of Rumplestiltskin

Hey weenie, your service to this country was , "what"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 07/14/2008
- mediamarv See Profile I'm a Fan of mediamarv

Wonder if The New Yorker will do a cover on this story...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 07/13/2008
- bascombe See Profile I'm a Fan of bascombe

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L13231024.htm

it's pretty unhappy in Iraq, too

It's all working out so well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 07/13/2008
- HumeSkeptic See Profile I'm a Fan of HumeSkeptic

Yes. But the interesting thing to notice is that somehow Sunnis living in Diyala province are all connected with al Qaeda. Whoever is opposed to the occupiers and their enablers is al Qaeda.

Sunnis got scr-ewed in Iraq. Big time. And if they resist, they are called al Qaeda and killed.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 07/13/2008
- Rumplestiltskin See Profile I'm a Fan of Rumplestiltskin

What about those darn Kurds?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 AM on 07/14/2008
- Rumplestiltskin See Profile I'm a Fan of Rumplestiltskin

Clue. let them win. Okay?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 PM on 07/13/2008
- HumeSkeptic See Profile I'm a Fan of HumeSkeptic

Clue. Soldiers don't consult this web site before deciding whether to win or not, Einstein.

Now, tell me what a "win" would be in Iraq? I noticed that the lying G