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NATO's deadliest month in Afghan war

S.Korean workers in Afghanistan in rocket attack: official
Seoul (AFP) July 1, 2010 - South Korean civilian workers in Afghanistan have come under rocket attack but no one was hurt, the foreign ministry said Thursday. The attack was launched early Thursday near a construction site in the northern province of Parwan where the South's provincial reconstruction team is to be based, a spokesman told AFP. "Four rockets fell in and outside the site but no casualties have been reported," he said, adding there was no information on who fired the rockets. The South's team, which currently numbers 49 civilian workers and eight police officers, plans to officially launch its aid mission Thursday.

It will be progressively expanded this year to about 100 reconstruction workers and 40 police who will train Afghan counterparts, according to Yonhap news agency. The defence ministry declined to give figures. The Koreans will help strengthen the provincial government's capabilities and offer medical services as well as vocational and police training. A South Korean army contingent is to protect them. An advance team of about 90 troops has been stationed in Parwan since mid-June and about 240 more troops are due to join them this month and in late August.

A purported Taliban spokesman last October warned that South Koreans "should be prepared for the consequences" if they dispatch a contingent, accusing Seoul of breaking a promise not to send troops back to Afghanistan. The South, a close US ally, sent 210 engineering and medical troops to Afghanistan in 2002. It withdrew them in late 2007 after Taliban insurgents took 23 South Korean church volunteers hostage and murdered two of them. Seoul said the withdrawal was already planned and not part of any deal with the kidnappers. South Korea also sent non-combat troops to Iraq but withdrew them in December 2008 after four years.
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) July 1, 2010
The loss of more than 100 foreign troops in the Afghan war in June serves as a grim reminder to the international community of why Afghanistan is known as the "graveyard of empires".

At 102, the June toll almost tripled the number of US and NATO soldiers killed in May, making the month the deadliest since the war began in 2001.

The new commander of the Afghan war, US General David Petraeus, warned this week the fighting will get tougher before the situation on the ground improves.

Petraeus, speaking on Tuesday at a senate hearing on his nomination to replace his sacked predecessor General Stanley McChrystal, said foreign troops in Afghanistan were fighting an "industrial-strength insurgency".

"My sense is that the tough fighting will continue; indeed it may get more intense in the next few months," he said.

The latest death was announced on Wednesday by NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), which said a soldier had died in an attack in eastern Afghanistan.

While it gave no details of the circumstances, nor the nationality of the soldier, a major anti-Taliban operation is under way in the eastern province of Kunar involving hundreds of NATO and Afghan troops.

Just two months ago, in April, the number of foreign soldiers who died in the country was 20, according to an AFP tally based on that kept by the independent icasualties.org website.

The previous deadliest month the allied force suffered in its efforts to quell the Taliban insurgency was August last year, when 77 soldiers lost their lives.

In total 322 foreign soldiers have died so far this year, compared with a toll for all 2009 of 520.

Afghanistan is in the grip of an Islamist insurgency that has gained strength every year since the Taliban regrouped a few months after their brutal regime was overthrown by a US-led invasion in retaliation for the September 11 attacks.

The Taliban authorities had harboured Al-Qaeda, giving the organisation led by Osama bin Laden a safe haven, from where they planned the devastating 2001 attacks on the US that killed more than 3,000 people.

Western leaders and military commanders say that only by meeting the Taliban on the battlefield in Afghanistan can they safeguard their own people from further attacks.

But they concede the escalating death toll of foreign soldiers -- most of them American -- is attributable in part to intensified military operations against the Taliban in their southern strongholds.

"It's a tough time we're in," said German army General Josef Blotz, a spokesman for ISAF.

"We are in the arena, there's no way out now, we have to stay on, we have to fight this campaign," he told reporters this week.

The US and NATO have 140,000 troops in Afghanistan, set to peak at 150,000 by August, completing the "surge" ordered up by US President Barack Obama as part of a counter-insurgency strategy to speed the end of the war.

About 15,000 US, NATO and Afghan troops earlier this year went to Marjah, a poppy-producing region of southern Helmand province, long under the control of the Taliban.

The massive operation aimed to flush out Taliban insurgents in what commanders said was the biggest military push against the rebels since 2001. Governance was set to follow in the immediate wake of military success.

But fighting continues more than four months later, and an even bigger strike against the Taliban in neighbouring Kandahar province, the Islamists' heartland -- has been postponed.

Nevertheless, most of the newly-deployed troops -- including the 30,000 "surgers" -- are heading to Kandahar and Helmand, and battles are growing in number and intensity.

This in turn is drawing insurgents -- including fighters from Pakistan and other countries in the region -- into those areas, leading to a commensurate leap in casualties.

"With the build-up of these new reinforcements we were able to confront the insurgency and Taliban in areas where they have not been challenged for years," Blotz said.

"And that's the reason that we see some more violence in these days and weeks and unfortunately this also leads to a higher casualty rate."

Petraeus, due to arrive in Kabul at the weekend, tried to reassure the anxious Congressional hearing that the troops he will soon be commanding are making headway.

"The coalition force "has achieved progress in several locations" this year, he said.

But he warned them to brace for a "tough fight" ahead.



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