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July Is Deadliest Month of Afghan War for US
KABUL, Afghanistan - Three U.S. troops died in blasts in Afghanistan, bringing the death toll for July to at least 63 and surpassing the previous month's record as the deadliest for American forces in the nearly 9-year-old war.
An Army carry team moves a transfer case with the remains of Army Specialist Matthew R. Hennigan who died in Operation Enduring Freedom, during a dignified transfer at Dover Air Force Base, on July 2, in Dover, Delaware. (AFP/Getty Images/Brendan Smialowski) In Kabul, police fired weapons into the air Friday to disperse a crowd of angry Afghans who shouted "death to America," hurled stones and set fire to two vehicles after an SUV was involved in a traffic accident that killed four Afghans on the main airport road, according to the capital's criminal investigations chief, Abdul Ghaafar Sayedzada.
SUVs are often associated with foreigners, but it remained unclear who caused the accident because the occupants fled the scene. Sayedzada said two foreigners' vehicles at the scene were burned by the crowd.
A fatal traffic accident caused by a U.S. military convoy in 2006 triggered an anti-American riot in Kabul that left at least 14 people dead and dozens injured.
The three U.S. service members died in two separate blasts in southern Afghanistan on Thursday, a NATO statement said Friday. It gave no nationalities, but U.S. officials said all three were Americans. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity pending notification of kin.
U.S. and NATO commanders had warned casualties would rise as the international military force ramps up the war against the Taliban, especially in their southern strongholds in Helmand and Kandahar provinces. President Barack Obama ordered 30,000 reinforcements to Afghanistan last December in a bid to turn back a resurgent Taliban.
British and Afghan troops launched a new offensive Friday in the Sayedebad area of Helmand to try to deny insurgents a base from which to launch attacks in Nad Ali and Marjah, the British military announced. Coalition and Afghan troops have sought to solidify control of Marjah after overrunning the poppy-farming community five months ago.
In Kabul, a crowd threw stones and set fire to an SUV after a traffic accident Friday in which two Afghans were killed and two were injured, according to traffic official Abdul Saboor. SUVs are associated with foreigners, but Saboor said the occupants of the vehicle fled the scene.
The tally of 63 American service member deaths in July is based on military reports compiled by The Associated Press. June had been the deadliest month for both the U.S. and the overall NATO-led force. A total of 104 international service members died last month, including 60 Americans.
The American deaths this month include Petty Officer 2nd Class Justin McNeley from Kingman, Arizona, and Petty Officer 3rd Class Jarod Newlove, 25, from the Seattle area. They went missing last week in Logar province south of Kabul, and the Taliban announced they were holding one of the sailors.
McNeley's body was recovered there Sunday, and Newlove's body was pulled from a river Wednesday evening, Afghan officials said. The Taliban offered no explanation for Newlove's death, but Afghan officials speculated he died of wounds suffered when the two were ambushed by the Taliban.
The discovery of Newlove's body only deepened the mystery of the men's disappearance nearly 60 miles (100 kilometers) from their base in Kabul. An investigation is under way, but with both sailors dead, U.S. authorities remain at a loss to explain what two junior enlisted men in noncombat jobs were doing driving alone in Logar - much of which is not under government control.
Newlove's father, Joseph Newlove, told KOMO-TV in Seattle he too was baffled why his son had left the relative safety of Kabul.
"He's never been out of that town. So why would he go out of that town? He wouldn't have," he said.
Senior military officials in Washington, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case, said the sailors were never assigned anywhere near where their bodies were found.
A NATO official in Kabul shot down speculation the two were abducted in Kabul and driven to Logar - the same province where New York Times reporter David Rohde was kidnapped in 2008 while trying to make contact with a Taliban commander. Rohde and an Afghan colleague escaped in June 2009 after seven months in captivity, most spent in Taliban sanctuaries in Pakistan.
Samer Gul, chief of Logar's Charkh district, said the two sailors, in a four-wheel drive armored SUV, were seen Friday a week ago by a guard working for the district chief's office. The guard tried to flag down the vehicle, carrying a driver and a passenger, but it kept going, Gul said.
Gul said there is a well-paved road that leads into the Taliban area and suggested the Americans may have mistaken that for the main highway - which is much older and more dilapidated.
Elsewhere, violence continued Friday.
Four Afghan civilians were killed and three were injured when their vehicle was hit by a roadside bomb in Zabul province of southern Afghanistan, provincial spokesman Mohammed Jan Rasoolyar said. When police arrived at the scene, Taliban fighters opened fire. One insurgent was killed, the spokesman said.
In Kandahar, a candidate in September's parliamentary election escaped assassination Friday when a bomb planted on a motorcycle exploded, city security chief Fazil Ahmad Sherzad said. The Interior Ministry said a woman and a child were killed and another child was wounded.
Associated Press Writers Mirwais Khan in Kandahar and Amir Shah in Kabul contributed to this report.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllIt may be horrific, but AIPAC feels that it's worth the sacrifice.
Afghanistan has been the graveyard of empires since Alexander the Great and it will be America's graveyard also, just like Vietnam was. What a farce, the whore MSM calls it an ambush when our troops are killed by the Taliban, but never calls it an ambush when American troops kill innocent civilians; that is called either collateral damage, a mistake, or some other bs euphemism, but not that it was an ambush by our troops.
>>In Kabul, police fired weapons into the air Friday to disperse a crowd of angry Afghans who shouted "death to America,"
In must be all those "freedoms" they hate. I find it odd that the US Government continues to supress information on the nature of the War in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere because they claim it will "inflame passions" and be a threat to US security..yet at the same time openly boast what a FREE society the USA is which they then claim the reason Muslims hate them.
It makes little sense. If the TRUTH of the nature of the wars MUST be kept secret so as not to inflame passions, maybe the USA should openly proclaim that they are NOT a free society , hate porn, think women should be in burqa's, do not have freedom of speech and religion, and don't have free and fair elections.
Subscribing to the theory "they hate us for our freedoms" this should end all resistance to the USA.
>>A NATO official in Kabul shot down speculation the two were abducted in Kabul and driven to Logar - the same province where New York Times reporter David Rohde was kidnapped in 2008 while trying to make contact with a Taliban commander
An interesting choice of words. "abducted...kidnapped". When Afghans are seized by NATO forces are they also "abducted and kidnapped"?
All these people signed up to die, why do we care about this ? How about civ. numbers ?
More troops, more targets.
Sorry, posted when I meant to preview. See below.
I get so sad when I read such things as, "We will pull out of Afghanistan in 2011 (or 2012). Think about it. It is an admission that the war is not going well, that we will eventually go home. What it is also saying is we will lose another 800-1,000 soldiers before we leave. Talk about waste! We are going to waste all of these lives, not to mention uncounted Afghan deaths, injuries, displacements.
We are going to do this. If we are eventually going to leave these poor people alone, why not now and save that ghastly butcher's bill?
The other day, the UN said their "peacekeeping forces" will remain in Afghanistan forever, or at least for many years. (in other words, until the Afghans throw them out, too.)
Mother Earth is bleeding oil and we are bleeding humanity, for what? Power? Greed? (rhetorical)
Billions for offense, but not one cent for caring, for helping. $33 billion struck from education, $33 billion given to the war machine to prosecute still more war. Meanwhile, our infrastructure is falling apart. Bad roads, failing bridges and overpasses, Schools falling apart from neglect, homeless in the millions, foreclosed on and thrown into the street. Few jobs and there are less each day. GMO crops that do little more than enrich Monsanto and others of their ilk. The list goes on and on. I don't know if we will.
How many civilians have died so far in Afghanistan in July alone? That's the number I'm more interested in. I bet it's 63 every few hours. But the American media never reports it, does it? Are we this inhuman that we don't care?
And why did these soldiers volunteer in the first place? Now I'm supposed to feel sorry for them? Couldn't they get a normal job and pay for their college education like everyone else?
At least we now have 63 less troops incinerating thousands of innocent men, women and children in an extremely impoverished country that never attacked us, in yet another illegal war for hegemony, oil, natural gas (throw in heroine and opium if you'd like) and billions of dollars in non-bid reconstruction contracts, a war that the US should never have started. Just GTFO.
Let's remember that 15 of the 19 hijackers on 9/11 were Saudis. The others were from Lebanon, Egypt and UAE. 9/11 wasn't an act of war, it was a terrorist attack to begin with. The masterminds (inside job or not) are still at large. Where's Bin Laden? Why doesn't the US obey the International Rule of Law?
Rule of Law...from nat hentoff:
…Also troubled, as Reuters' Entous reported, are certain American military officers who are very much aware that the most murderous of the drone planes are run by the CIA….
...But, Entous adds, other American intelligence officers "proudly tout the drone campaign as the most precise and possibly !!!humane targeted killing program!!! in the history of warfare."
Last year, another vigilant reporter, Walter Pincus of the Washington Post, described how enamored of the drones President Obama already was. Pincus reported (Aug. 11, 2009): "The Air Force will train more pilots to fly unmanned aerial systems from ground operations centers (thousands of miles away) than pilots to fly fighter or bomber aircraft."
One trillion dollars well spent. Soon, the US will find out why they call Afghanistan "The Graveyard of Empires"
So July is the 'deadliest' month - let's wait to see what August brings.
Some of these pictures are downright creepy. The guy in that box is DEAD and it could well be somebody just like these box carriers who is next.
Every one of them knows this but they move in a kind of darkness. One of them is dead and six more of them carry his body off a carrier like it was a sacred relic.
Military personnel among many others see something sacred about a dead man. If the guy's alive (maybe missing a limb or two) shit on him. Just let him try to collect his benefits.
Look at the picture on the cover of TIME magazine of the woman with her nose cut off! This is a war for the liberation of women in Afghanistan. No accomodation can be made with the Taliban.