AP/ July 8, 2012, 4:40 PM

NATO: 6 service members killed in Afghanistan

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(AP) KABUL, Afghanistan - A bomb in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday killed six NATO service members, on a day where a total of 29 people died from roadside bombs and insurgent attacks.

NATO said the blast was caused by an improvised explosive device but provided no further details about the attack and did not identify the dead service members. The statement said NATO's policy is to allow "national authorities" to give details about the soldiers.

A surge in Afghan and coalition forces during the past two years routed Taliban fighters from many of their strongholds in the south, but the insurgents have stepped up their attacks this summer to take back key areas.

The service members' deaths were the latest on Sunday caused by bombs planted by insurgents along roadsides, paths or mountain tracks.

In addition to the six NATO deaths, bombs and attacks killed 16 Afghan civilians, five policemen and two members of the U.S.-led coalition in southern Afghanistan, Afghan and NATO authorities said.

The civilians, including women and children, were killed in three blasts in Arghistan district, along Afghanistan's border with Pakistan.

Kandahar province spokesman Ahmad Jawed Faisal said one bomb exploded when a minivan ran over it Sunday morning. A second went off when other civilians riding a tractor arrived to help the wounded. A third explosion occurred about two hours later when a civilian vehicle hit a roadside bomb in another area of the district, killing two women.

At least 10 civilians were injured in the three blasts.

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According to the United Nations, last year was the deadliest on record for civilians in the Afghan war, with 3,021 killed. The number of Afghan civilians killed dropped 36 percent in the first four months of this year compared with last year, but the U.N. says that too many are still being caught up in violence.

The policemen were killed while responding to a gun battle against insurgents early Sunday at a checkpoint in the Musa Qala district of neighboring Helmand province.

Daoud Ahmadi, the spokesman in Helmand, said a group of Taliban fighters attacked the police checkpoint at about 3 a.m.

Afghan police called for reinforcements, but on the way, one of the police vehicles hit a roadside bomb, killing the five policemen.

Ahmadi says three other policemen were wounded in the four-hour gun battle against the insurgents. He says the bodies of 20 insurgents were recovered from the battlefield.

Separately, two NATO service members were killed in southern Afghanistan — one in a roadside bomb explosion on Saturday and the other during an insurgent attack on Sunday.

NATO did not disclose where the incidents occurred or provide the nationalities of the soldiers killed.

So far this year, more than 225 NATO service members have been killed in Afghanistan.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Robert_In_Texas says:
May 2, 2011 the last of three directives to go into Afghanistan was completed with the death of bin Laden. The first two was to get rid of the Taliban in government and get a democratically elected government. So what's keeping our CIC from bringing them home? Simple, like it or not, he loves war for the profits the supporters of the DNC make. The republicans had Iraq and made a boat load of cash and now it's the democrats' turn. Look at Vietnam. Six years under the dems and four under the repubs. Maybe if we sent each and every member of Congress over there, our troops wouldn't be languishing in a country that never really wanted the west to interfere.
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smittyc says:
The sand is running out of the hourglass says Hilary. My condolences to the families that lost their children. I am truly truly sorry.
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atanu_banerjee says:
Time to rethink. Al-Qaida is demolished and the man behind 9/11 silenced. Our job is done. Change strategy and bring back our remaining heroes with honor. Thanks.
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Rejco100 says:
Come on people, send in six more of your boys.....of course Draft-Dodging Cowards & War Mongers Mitt Romney, Donald Trump, and Ted Nugent's Sissy-Boy Sons are exempt from serving.....
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mysteriousjz says:
President Ronald Reagan, honoring Afghan "freedom fighters" at the White House in 1983: "The Afghan Mujaheddin are the moral equivalent of the Founding Fathers of America."
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"To watch the courageous Afghan freedom fighters battle modern arsenals with simple hand-held weapons is an inspiration to those who love freedom."
- U.S. President Ronald Reagan, March 21, 1983
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