Sunday, December 12, 2010

Six U.S. Troops Killed in Afghanistan

latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fgw-afghan-violence-20101213,0,1548839.story

latimes.com

Six NATO troops killed in Afghanistan

NATO officials say the troops were killed in the south, but give no
details. A news report says all six were Americans, killed in a
suicide attack on a remote outpost in Kandahar

By Borzou Daragahi
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
4:46 PM PST, December 12, 2010

Reporting from Kabul

Taliban insurgents killed six members of the American-dominated
international military force in southern Afghanistan in a single
attack Sunday, Western officials announced.

A news release from NATO's International Security Assistance Force
headquarters in Kabul, the Afghan capital, gave no further details
about the attack, or the nationalities of the service members killed.

The New York Times, which has a reporter and photographer traveling
with American forces in southern Afghanistan, reported that all six
soldiers killed were U.S. troops at a remote outpost near the town of
Zhari, in Kandahar province. In an online report it said the outpost
was hit by a suicide bomber driving an explosives-laden minibus and
that the blast also injured at least a dozen U.S. and Afghan soldiers,
who were taken by helicopter to a nearby base.

Authorities in Helmand and Kandahar provinces, the primary battlefield
of the Taliban insurgency against the international forces and
Afghanistan's central government, said they had no further information
about the attacks.

The attack capped a weekend of violence that left dozens of civilians
and suspected insurgents dead and wounded across Afghanistan.

In the eastern province of Paktia, people threw stones at a protest
over the killing of seven suspected insurgents by U.S.-led forces
Saturday morning, the official Bakhtar news agency reported. Residents described the victims as guards working for a road construction company near the city of Gardez.

NATO-led forces issued a statement describing the men as suspected
insurgents possibly connected to the Haqqani network, one of the
factions allied with the Taliban. It said they refused to relinquish
their weapons and opened fire on Americans. The police chief of Paktia told the Bakhtar news agency that the seven were killed in a coalition airstrike.

The spokesman for Afghanistan's Ministry of Internal Affairs, which
oversees the national police, told reporters that insurgents launched
78 attacks, including three suicide bombings, during the last week,
mostly in the south and east.

Ministry spokesman Zemarai Bashary also said 12 civilians were killed
last week, a figure that did not square with other official figures,
and that 37 insurgents were killed and 121 arrested.

Meanwhile in Washington, the State Department said that Richard
Holbrooke, the Obama administration's special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, remained in critical condition Sunday at George Washington University Hospital. Holbrooke was hospitalized Friday and underwent emergency surgery to repair a tear in his aorta.

Holbrooke had an additional procedure Sunday to improve circulation.
He was visited by family, friends, colleagues and staff, and his wife,
Kati Marton, received calls from the presidents of Afghanistan and
Pakistan, State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley said.

"He had a tremendously difficult situation Friday," David Axelrod, an
aide to President Obama, said in an interview with CNN. "Anyone who
knows him — and I was with him Friday morning before this happened — knows how tough and resilient he is."

The Obama administration is set to issue a long-awaited report card
this week assessing U.S. strategy in Afghanistan.

daragahi@latimes.com

Times staff writer Katherine Skiba in Washington and special
correspondent Aimal Yaqoubi in Kabul contributed to this report.

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