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Afghan firefights

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   http://www.msnbc.com/news/849977.asp?vts=122120021210

http://www.msnbc.com/news/849977.asp?vts=122120021210

U.S. soldier slain in Afghan firefight
8 dead in Kabul helicopter crash

ASSOCIATED PRESS


KABUL, Afghanistan, Dec. 21 — Hours after a top American commander warned that coalition troops in Afghanistan face the threat of increased attacks, a U.S. soldier was killed in a firefight Saturday, while another was injured by rocket fire in a separate incident. Later Saturday, a German military helicopter crashed near the Kabul airport, killing at least six peacekeepers aboard and two children on the ground, officials said.

THE SLAIN SOLDIER was shot while on a nighttime operation in the eastern province of Paktika, near the border of Pakistan. An army statement from Fort Bragg, N.C. identified him as an 82nd Airborne Division paratrooper. His name was not released until his family could be notified.
He was the first U.S. soldier killed in combat in Afghanistan since August, when a soldier died of wounds suffered in a July ambush.

HELICOPTER CRASHES
There was no immediate information about the cause of the helicopter crash. British Maj. Gordon MacKenzie, spokesman for the peacekeepers, said the helicopter had not been fired upon.
Elsewhere, two U.S. soldiers were injured in separate incidents and an American base came under rocket fire — underscoring the continuing danger in Afghanistan.
On Friday, Lt. Gen. Daniel K. McNeil, a top U.S. commander in the region, warned that more attacks on American and allied troops were likely.

“Is there likely to be an increase in hostile acts against the coalition? I think yes,” McNeill told The Associated Press in an interview.
McNeil, speaking from the U.S. command center at Bagram Air Base, said American forces were stepping up reconstruction efforts in the war-battered nation, but their first priority was to hunt down terrorists — and that job was not over.
“We have not in my view captured or killed all the terrorists in Afghanistan,” he said. “Some of them have gone underground so deep that it’s difficult for me to put an absolute mark on them.”

IN FOR THE LONG HAUL
About 8,000 American troops are deployed across the mountainous nation, mostly along the eastern border with Pakistan. McNeill said the soldiers were in Afghanistan for the long haul, and he did not expect troop strength to be reduced if the United States goes to war with Iraq.
The soldier killed Saturday was in the eastern province of Paktika (Pak-TEE’-kuh) when his unit got into a firefight about 4 a.m. with forces suspected of being linked to the ousted Taliban regime or the al-Qaida, said Army spokesman Maj. Steve Clutter.
“They had these individuals under observation for a while,” Clutter said. “They were actually getting ready to approach them to investigate and as they got closer they realized they were armed.”
The enemy forces fled across the border into Pakistan, Clutter said.

In the other incidents, a U.S. special operations soldier was hurt Friday afternoon when rockets were fired at a U.S. compound in Asadabad, the capital of Afghanistan’s northeastern Kunar province. The soldier was taken to Bagram where he underwent surgery. He was listed in stable condition, the military said in a statement.
The air base immediately sent an A-10 aircraft to Asadabad. It strafed the area with 2,000 rounds from its 40-mm guns to try to flush out the enemy attackers. It was not known whether any of the attackers was hurt or killed.
Rockets, many Chinese-made and connected to crude water timers, have been fired frequently at U.S. troops stationed at the Khost airfield in eastern Afghanistan. The rockets, sometimes leaned against rocks, are difficult to aim and have rarely caused casualties.
A third solder was hurt in a weapons training exercise with the Afghan military near Spinboldak in southeast Afghanistan. The soldier was trying to correct a misfire on a rocket-propelled grenade launcher at the time.
He was stable after undergoing surgery at Bagram.
In the fourth incident, the military said two rockets were fired near a U.S. base at Khost in eastern Afghanistan. There were no injuries, and the base was not damaged.
Despite the incidents, U.S. Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Richard Myers said the “situation continues to get better over here.”
“U.S. and coalition forces have been shot at from time to time. We’re going to take some casualties,” Myers said while visiting troops at Bagram Saturday.
U.S. forces are hunting fugitive al-Qaida and Taliban in the rugged mountain peaks of eastern and northeastern Afghanistan. U.S. special forces are also looking for renegade rebel commander Gulbuddin Hekmatyar in the same region. Hekmatyar has made frequent calls for a holy war against American soldiers in Afghanistan.

TRAINING CAMPS RESUMED?
This week the United Nations issued a report saying that al-Qaida training camps had resumed in eastern Afghanistan. The camps are small and mobile, the report said.
The area also borders deeply conservative regions of Pakistan where suicide bombers are being recruited and trained, sources tell The Associated Press.
The bombers are being offered $50,000 for their families if they carry out suicide attacks in Afghanistan, the sources said. The presence of the training camps and plans to carry out suicide attacks was corroborated by a Western intelligence source.
With Saturday’s death, 16 U.S. servicemen have been killed in combat or hostile situations in Afghanistan since the anti-terror campaign began last year. The most recent fatality was on May 19.


© 2002 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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