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NATO-US Forces Suffer Deadliest Month Yet In Afghanistan Kabul (AFP) July 1, 2008 June was the deadliest month for foreign troops in Afghanistan since the 2001 fall of the Taliban and the second in a row in which casualties exceeded those in Iraq, official figures showed Tuesday. Forty-nine soldiers from the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and the separate US-led coalition died in combat, attacks or accidents in June, according to an AFP tally based on military statements. June accounted for more than 40 percent of the 122 deaths of foreign soldiers in Afghanistan during 2008, according to the independent website icasualties.org. Most were killed by roadside bombs hitting their convoys or patrols. ISAF spokesman General Carlos Branco said the figures should be seen in the context of rising numbers of international forces fighting a resurgent Taliban militia. "ISAF has many more soldiers now than in the past and is now going to places where it was not going before," Branco told AFP. By contrast, 31 soldiers including 29 Americans were killed in Iraq in June despite the fact that there are more than twice as many troops there as in Afghanistan, icasualties figures showed. International casualties in Afghanistan also outstripped those in Iraq in May. Foreign soldier deaths in Afghanistan hit 23 in May, 19 of them by hostile fire, while in Iraq the number of coalition soldiers killed dropped to 21, of whom 17 where in action. "If you want to compare the same period last year with the year to date (January 1- June 21) you find 55 in 2007 and 70 in 2008. However, comparisons in this domain can be very misleading if you don't put them into context," Branco said. He said that in January 2007 ISAF had 37,493 members and as of January 2008 there were nearly 50 000. "The ratio of killed in action per 1,000 troops in 2007 and 2008 is nearly the same. The ratio of killed in action per military engagements in 2007 and 2008 is again the same," he said.
earlier related report Some 200 German elite soldiers Monday took over a quick reaction force manned by Norway over the past years. It's a mission that requires expertise and courage and -- this could be the big problem for the German government -- may result in more casualties for Germany in Afghanistan. Yet German officials, most notably Chancellor Angela Merkel and Defense Minister Franz Josef Jung, so far have abstained from talking honestly about the Afghan mission. "The security situation has become more difficult" is Jung's boldest statement about the danger German soldiers are facing. Why? Mainly because Germany's contribution to aid the international forces in Afghanistan is seen very critically at home. Some 26 German soldiers have died in Afghanistan so far, mostly because of roadside bombs and terror attacks. Observers say a non-proportional increase of that death toll would result in serious damage for any party responsible for it. Merkel and Jung thus have not yet talked about a "fighting mission," but the quick reaction force is just that: a unit tasked with securing International Security Assistance Force missions and fighting insurgents wherever need be -- and that could be in northern AND in southern Afghanistan. For the past six years, Germany has overseen reconstruction work in the relatively calm northern provinces. Berlin has resisted recent NATO calls to send its troops to the volatile southern part of the country, where NATO allies take heavy casualties fighting the Taliban. Germany should "consider increasing the flexibility and use of its forces," a high-ranking military official said recently in Berlin, with a nod to the caveats that several nations, most notably Germany, have given their troops. The commanders in Afghanistan these days "are taught to play defense, not offense," he said. Germany recently gave in to international pressure and agreed to train more Afghan police and send an additional 1,000 troops to Afghanistan, bringing its total force in the country to 4,500. Only 23 percent of Germans back that decision, according to a recent poll. According to experts, this is due to the German government's failure to sell the mission to the public. Germany's security benefits from the Afghan engagement, observers say, but the public doesn't really buy that. The German public and many lawmakers, even from the government parties, still resist sending German troops into harm's way. So far, public opposition to the mission has been unagitated. But that would certainly change if German soldiers die in increasing numbers -- a worst-case scenario that could become reality, experts say. The quick reaction force has to shoulder a "real fighting mission," Egon Ramms, a high-ranking NATO general with ISAF, recently told a German radio station. "They certainly aren't there to drill wells," he said. Every year, Germany has to prolong its Afghan engagement, and the next decision awaits lawmakers in September. The decision could be a bit rockier than in recent years, given Germany's engagement and the still fragile security in the country. The Pentagon recently authored a report admitting that the Taliban had "coalesced into a resilient insurgency," The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this week. "The Taliban will challenge the control of the Afghan government in rural areas, especially in the south and east," the report warns. "The Taliban will also probably attempt to increase its presence in the west and north." That would mean much more work for the German quick reaction force -- and much more trouble for the German government.
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Taliban unable to expand insurgency in Afghanistan: NATO Kabul (AFP) June 29, 2008 The Taliban cannot expand its insurgency into new Afghan areas, NATO said Sunday, a day after the Pentagon warned the rebels were likely to boost their presence in the north and west of the country. |
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