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Perilous
Times
Five US soldiers killed by Afghan bomb
Five Nato soldiers said to be Americans have been killed by a bomb
in Afghanistan on Thursday.
10:55PM BST 11 Aug 2011
The Telegraph UK
The tragic news came as the Taliban accused the US of lying over
claims it has killed the militants who shot down an American
helicopter. Thirty-eight troops died in the crash.
The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) has not
officially revealed the nationalities of those killed in the blast
today, but a US military officer said they were Americans.
The deaths come a week after the Taliban shot down the US
helicopter, killing 38 people including 30 Americans, the biggest
loss of US life in a single incident since the 2001 invasion.
At least 387 coalition soldiers have now been killed in
Afghanistan so far this year, compared to 711 deaths in 2010,
according to an AFP tally based on independent website
icasualties.org.
South Afghanistan is the Taliban's heartland and was the focus of
a US troop surge from 2010 that commanders say has made
significant progress.
But the militia still frequently strike troops on foot patrol or
travelling in armoured vehicles with crudely-assembled improvised
explosive devices (IEDs).
From April to June, 3,485 IEDs exploded or were found in
Afghanistan, according to the Pentagon, up 14 per cent from the
same period last year.
In addition, officials said five Afghan police were killed in an
overnight clash with the Taliban in the southern province of
Helmand.
"One of our police posts was attacked in Gereshk last night. Five
policemen were killed," said Helmand provincial police chief Abdul
Hakim Angaar.
In the capital today, President Hamid Karzai announced that he
would not seek a third term in office.
The Afghan constitution limits a president to two terms and his
office issued the statement in response to "rumours" from
opponents suggesting he could seek to try and change this rule.
On Wednesday, US General John Allen, commander of the Nato-led
international force in Afghanistan, said the Taliban fighters
responsible for downing the helicopter last Friday had been killed
in an air strike.
But Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said that was "not true".
"After seeing the enemy statement, we contacted the mujahed
(fighter) who shot down the helicopter and he's not dead. He's
busy conducting jihad elsewhere in the country," Mujahid told AFP
by telephone from an undisclosed location.
Mujahid admitted that four "ordinary" Taliban fighters had been
killed in the US air strike but said they were not the ones who
shot down the helicopter.
He added that the fighter responsible had now left Wardak
province, where the crash took place in the wild, Taliban-infested
Tangi Valley.
The Taliban are known to exaggerate and distort their public
statements as part of a propaganda campaign accompanying their
10-year campaign to evict the mainly US foreign troops who ousted
them from power in the 2001 invasion.
A senior Afghan official told AFP this week that the helicopter
was brought down in a Taliban trap designed to lure international
forces to the scene.
General Allen said the Chinook, which was carrying 25 members of
the elite special forces, had been sent in as part of an operation
targeting a Taliban leader, who is still at large.
When "less than 10" fighters were seen "escaping", the Chinook was
ordered in, Allen said. It was bringing special forces who were to
pursue the insurgents.
But the helicopter was shot out of the sky with a rocket-propelled
grenade, killing all 38 people on board.
Afterwards, the military said US forces tracked the insurgents
responsible, calling in an air strike late Monday with an F-16
fighter.
The air strike killed the "shooter" as well as a Taliban militant,
Mullah Mohibullah, as they "were attempting to flee the country in
order to avoid capture", ISAF said.
In a separate incident today, two Afghan soldiers were found dead
in Logar province, which borders Wardak in central Afghanistan,
after being abducted by insurgents Wednesday, police said.