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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Friendly fire incident leaves five Nato troops dead in Afghanistan
US soldiers came under heavy fire from Taliban militants and called in air strike but helicopters shot wrong targets
Afghan
soldiers in Nangarhar,where gunmen broke into a Nato complex in
Jalalabad, the provincial capital of the eastern Afghan province
overnight. Photograph: Xinhua /Landov / Barcroft Media/Xinhua
/Landov/Barcroft Media
Emma Graham-Harrison in Kabul
Tuesday 10 June 2014
An air strike has killed five US troops and one Afghan soldier in southernAfghanistan, the deadliest friendly fire incident of the war for Nato forces.
Helicopters were called in by US soldiers when they came under Taliban
attack after a day's heavy fighting in Zabul province, east of Kandahar,
Afghan officials said, but the pilots hit the wrong men.
"We had launched a clearance operation in an area with a high security
threat," the Zabul provincial police chief, General Ghulam Sakhi
Rughlewanai, said. "When it was over and we were returning to base, the
enemy opened fire and [the US troops] asked for air support. The
helicopters made a mistake and targeted their own people."
More than 150 police and soldiers, both US and Afghan – along with a
handful of intelligence officers – had taken part in the mission, which
began at 6am and ended a couple of hours after sunset. The insurgents
attacked again after they gathered to leave the area.
Afghan security forces have gone on the offensive against Taliban
fighters in advance of 14 June, when the second round of a crucial
presidential election will be held. Insurgents have vowed to disrupt the
voting, so government troops are trying to create bubbles of security
at polling stations.
Nato forces have officially stepped back from frontline fighting to
focus on training Afghan soldiers, and death rates have dropped
dramatically.
The deaths, along with one other in eastern Afghanistan, made Monday the bloodiest day for foreign forces since a helicopter was shot down in December 2013, killing six.
But some troops still go out on operations to help Afghan soldiers in
areas where they have weaknesses, including limited intelligence, over
calling in air support. It is one of those teams that appears to have
been caught up in Monday's attack.
"We can confirm five International Security Assistance Force service
members died in southern Afghanistan yesterday," the ISAF said.
"The casualties occurred during a security operation when their unit
came into contact with enemy forces. Tragically, there is the
possibility that 'fratricide' may have been involved."
If confirmed, that makes it the deadliest friendly fire incident in
Afghanistan for several years, and the worst of the war for foreign
troops. In 2010, German soldiers killed six Afghan troops who were rushing to the aid of other Afghan forces in a fight against Taliban.
The worst single incident of the war for coalition soldiers was in 2002, when a US fighter pilot dropped a 500lb bomb on Canadian troops – carrying out a live-fire exercise near an old al-Qaida training base – killing four and injuring eight.
Perhaps the most notorious friendly fire incident of the past decade was the 2004 death of American football player Pat Tilman.
His family were originally told he had been killed in a Taliban ambush,
and did not learn the truth until after he had been buried, causing a
public outcry and prompting accusations of a cover-up.
Other attacks within one country's military or between different
coalition forces have been a small but recurrent cause of death and
injury, including two British soldiers in 2012 and one in 2010.
Sophisticated identifying and communications equipment has cut confusion
on the battlefield, one of the leading causes of friendly fire deaths,
but the accuracy of weapons targeting has also improved, making any
mistake more likely to be lethal.
Another soldier died in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, Nato said, but
not from a combat injury. It gave no further details. At least 40
foreign soldiers have died in Afghanistan this year, although the number
of dead has fallen dramatically from a peak of more than 700, in 2010.
There are about 50,000 Nato troops still in Afghanistan, but due to
leave by the end of this year. The US has promised to leave about 10,000
behind, bolstered by hundreds from allies, if the new president signs a
long-delayed security agreement with Washington.

