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KABUL, Afghanistan: NATO said Sunday that its forces accidentally killed at least four civilians in eastern Afghanistan, while an official in the nation's west said foreign troops used air strikes against Afghan police, killing nine. A NATO soldier died in fighting in the east.The reported civilian and police deaths could damage popular support for the Afghan government as well as for foreign forces operating here. President Hamid Karzai has pleaded with the U.S. and other nations fighting resurgent militants to avoid civilian casualties.NATO's International Security Assistance Force said it was investigating whether three other civilians also were killed Saturday night in the Barmal district of Paktika province when its troops fired two mortar rounds that landed nearly half a mile (1 kilometer) short of their target.The alliance said it was providing medical aid to four civilians who were wounded."ISAF deeply regrets this accident, and an investigation as to the exact circumstances of this tragic event is now under way," it said in a statement.Today in Asia - PacificThailand and Cambodia talks fail to end temple standoffBus blasts kill 2 in southwestern ChinaChina begins pulling soldiers out of quake zoneOn the other side of the war-torn country in Farah province, a convoy of foreign forces showed up in Anar Dara district near the Iranian border and clashed with Afghan police, killing nine of them, said provincial Deputy Governor Younus Rasuli.He said the foreign troops had not informed local officials they were coming, and the police thought they were enemy fighters. The two sides fought from about midnight until 4 a.m. Sunday, and the foreign forces used airstrikes, Rasuli said.The U.S.-led coalition said it was investigating the report. It said its forces, along with Afghan troops, had retaliated in defense against "a non-uniformed hostile force.""The combined patrol signaled their status as coalition forces, but continued to receive fire," a military statement said. "Coalition forces then returned small arms fire and engaged the enemy with precision close air support."Also Sunday, a NATO soldier was killed during fighting in the eastern Khost province, the alliance said in a statement. NATO did not identify the soldier's nationality, but most of the troops in that area are American.Separately, a mine exploded under a civilian vehicle in Gereshk district in the southern province of Helmand on Sunday, killing three children and wounding four other people, said provincial police Chief Mohammad Hussein Andiwal.Andiwal accused Taliban militants of planting the mine on a road frequently used by Afghan and foreign troops.On Saturday, militants attacked a police checkpoint in the same district but in the ensuing gunfight three Taliban fighters were killed, Andiwal said. No police were injured in that clash, he said.Meanwhile, the Ministry of Defense said Afghan troops battled insurgents in the southern Kandahar province on Saturday, killing 18 militants, wounding 25 and detained 15 others.In neighboring Zabul province, Afghan troops killed nine militants and wounded seven others, the ministry said in a statement.Neither claim could be independently verified.Afghanistan faces intensifying militancy nearly seven years after the U.S.-led invasion of the country ousted the hard-line Islamic Taliban movement from power.More than 2,500 people have died in insurgency-related violence this year in the country, according to an Associated Press tally of official figures.Most have been militants, but the total includes hundreds of ordinary citizens.NATO and the coalition insist they take great precautions to avoid civilian casualties.Commanders accuse insurgents of endangering innocents by launching attacks from residential areas and by carrying out suicide attacks that kill far more bystanders than security personnel.___Associated Press writers Amir Shah and Fisnik Abrashi in Kabul and Noor Khan in Kandahar contributed to this report.
You mean they actually did something right?
Quote from: nopeaceforland on July 21, 2008, 08:57:45 PMYou mean they actually did something right? Yep. Four less Muslims in this world.
Quote from: Blastaway on July 21, 2008, 09:16:19 PMQuote from: nopeaceforland on July 21, 2008, 08:57:45 PMYou mean they actually did something right? Yep. Four less Muslims in this world.Unfortunately, not enough!
An "Afghan civilian" is like a square circle or a straight homosexual.
Quote from: C.F. on July 21, 2008, 10:06:47 PMAn "Afghan civilian" is like a square circle or a straight homosexual.Or a sober alcoholic.
Quote from: Blastaway on July 21, 2008, 10:31:44 PMQuote from: C.F. on July 21, 2008, 10:06:47 PMAn "Afghan civilian" is like a square circle or a straight homosexual.Or a sober alcoholic.Or black excellence.(I'm sorry, I couldn't resist. We all know that everyone is equal.)
If 40,000 instead of 4 "Afghan civilians" had been killed in air raids, we would have won the war within days as opposed to still fighting after seven years there.
Forget Afghanistan, if you want to kill the weed, attack it at the root: Pakistan!!!
They should have more "accidents"
Quote from: vikram on July 22, 2008, 02:22:28 AMForget Afghanistan, if you want to kill the weed, attack it at the root: Pakistan!!!Three Cheers...