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Ten killed in Afghan insurgent attack

Updated on: 04 October,2009 02:01 PM IST  | 
Agencies |

Eight US soldiers and two Afghan troopers were killed when suspected Taliban insurgents attacked their outposts in eastern Afghanistan near the border with Pakistan, officials said on Sunday.

Ten killed in Afghan insurgent attack

Eight US soldiers and two Afghan troopers were killed when suspected Taliban insurgents attacked their outposts in eastern Afghanistan near the border with Pakistan, officials said on Sunday.


The militants launched a complex attack from a local mosque and nearby village on Afghan and US forces Saturday that raged throughout the day in Nuristan province, the US military said in a statement.


"Coalition forces effectively repelled the attack and inflicted heavy enemy casualties while eight ISAF and two ANSF service members were killed," the statement said.


NATO spokesman Colonel Wayne Shanks confirmed that the eight International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) casualties were US soldiers.

The attack was the deadliest single assault for around 60,000 US military troops in Afghanistan in past several months. The combined force was operating under the NATO-led ISAF.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said the rebel fighters killed 40 US soldiers and 30 Afghan forces in the massive offensive, while four insurgents were killed and seven injured when the US military responded with aerial bombings.

Mujahid claimed that their fighters captured 30 Afghan security forces including the police chief of Kamdish district, where the combat occurred.

Nuristan Governor Jamaluddin Bader confirmed the clash, but said all communications with the remote district headquarters were cut off.

Colonel Randy George, US commander of Task Force Mountain Warrior, described the attack in the statement as complex and in a difficult area.

"Previously announced plans to depart the area as part of a broader realignment to protect larger population centers remain unchanged," the statement said. "The sources of the conflict in the area involved complex tribal, religious and economic dynamics."

The attack happened one day after five US soldiers were killed in separate Taliban-led attacks. US and other NATO military fatalities are on the rise as Taliban militants have stepped up attacks on Afghan and foreign forces this year.

A total of 387 international soldiers had been killed in the Afghanistan conflict so far this year, according to icasualties.org, an independent website that tracks casualties in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The 2009 fatalities make it the deadliest year since international deployments began in late 2001 when the US ousted the Taliban's ultra-Islamic regime from Kabul.

The top NATO commander, US General Stanley McChrystal, has asked for up to 40,000 extra foreign troops to help reverse gains made by Taliban over the past recent years. Currently more than 100,000 international troops are stationed in the country.

US President Barack Obama, who ordered 21,000 additional US soldiers earlier this year, has yet to respond to the demand.

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