2 US Soldiers Killed, 4 German Soldiers
Wounded in Afghanistan
July 19, 2010
Two US troops killed in Afghan war
Prss TV, Monday, 19 July 2010, 13:37:23 GMT
US-led forces are experiencing some of their deadliest days in
Afghanistan.
Bomb attacks have killed two US soldiers and six
policemen in Afghanistan on the eve of an international conference in
the Afghan capital of Kabul.
The US soldiers were killed in
separate bomb attacks in the country's volatile south. The exact
locations of the attacks are not known yet.
The deaths bring to
380 the number of foreign soldiers killed in Afghanistan in 2010.
The six Afghan policemen were killed when their vehicle was hit by a
roadside bomb in the restive Kandahar province. Four other policemen
were wounded in the attack.
The attacks come ahead of a key
international conference on the future of the war-torn country.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai and UN chief Ban Ki-moon are to chair
Tuesday's summit which focuses on security, economic development and
regional cooperation. Representatives from 70 countries, including about
40 foreign ministers, will attend the gathering.
There has been
an upsurge in attacks against US-led foreign troops and government
forces in Afghanistan over the past months.
Foreign forces are
experiencing some of their bloodiest days in Afghanistan since the
US-led invasion of the country in 2001.
Some 140,000 US-led
troops are currently stationed in Afghanistan. A further 10,000 troops
are expected to be deployed to the war-ravaged country in the coming
weeks.
NATO's mounting death toll has led to a dramatic decline
in public support for the Afghan war across Europe and the US.
JR/AKM
4 German troops wounded in Afghanistan
Press TV, Mon, 19 Jul 2010 13:07:04 GMT
German troops are increasingly falling victim to Taliban fighters in
Afghanistan.
A powerful roadside bomb blast has wounded at least four
German troops in Afghanistan amid rising attacks against US-led forces
in the country.
NATO said on Monday the soldiers were injured
when an improvised explosive device in northern Konduz province struck
their armored military vehicle.
A spokesman with the US-led
alliance in Konduz confirmed the incident.
A spokesman for the
Taliban, Zabiullah Mujahid, claimed responsibility for the attack,
saying four German soldiers were killed in the blast.
Germany
has about 5,000 soldiers in the relatively peaceful northern
Afghanistan, making it the third-largest foreign contingent after the US
and the UK.
US President Barack Obama wants Germany to add
thousands of more troops and to increase its geographical span to
include the volatile south and east.
The rising number of
casualties has increased opposition to the Afghan war in the member
states of the western military alliance.
The 2001 US-led
invasion was launched with the objective of brining peace and stability
to Afghanistan. Nine years on, however, Taliban militancy has reached
new heights and civilians continue to pay the price.
The
mounting death toll has raised fears that 2010 could become the
deadliest year for US-led forces in Afghanistan since the invasion of
the country in 2001.
The violent incidents and rising fatalities
in Afghanistan come despite a massive troop surge in the war-torn
country.
Some 140,000 US and NATO troops are currently stationed
in Afghanistan. A further 10,000 are expected to be deployed there in
the coming weeks.
JR/AKM
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