Afghan Violence Claims 100th U.K. Soldier
BBC Reporter Also Found Shot In Head As Laura Bush Tours Country Touting Progress
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First Lady Visits Afghanistan
"CBS News RAW": First lady Laura Bush arrived in Afghanistan to highlight signs of rebirth in the war-torn country. Her visit came ahead of a Paris conference in which the country will seek international aid.
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Local Afghan men look at the dead body of BBC reporter Abdul Samad Rohani in an ambulance in Helmand province, south of Kabul on June 8, 2008. Rohani was found in a cemetary with a bullet wound to the head. (AP Photo/Abdul Khaleq)
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U.S. first lady Laura Bush gestures during a joint press conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai at the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan on Sunday, June 8, 2008. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)
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Laura Bush and Governor of the Bamiyan province Habiba Sarabi, left, visit female recruits at the Police Training Academy in Bamiyan, Afghanistan, June 8, 2008. Sarabi is Afghanistan's first female provincial governor. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)
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Afghanistan
Learn about the people, economy and history.
The soldiers were killed in a suicide bombing while on foot patrol less than a mile from their base in Afghanistan's Upper Sangin Valley, the British military said. A fourth soldier was wounded. The deaths brought the British military's death toll in Afghanistan to 100 since the 2001 invasion by the U.S. and its allies.
Laura Bush, on her third unannounced visit to the country, flew into the Afghan capital then immediately boarded a helicopter for a 50-minute flight to Bamiyan province, the farthest she has traveled from Kabul.
Mrs. Bush is addressing a donors conference Thursday in Paris. France has set a goal of raising $12 billion to $15 billion to fund Afghan reconstruction projects through 2014. The United States is looking to contribute about a quarter of that.
The head of Britain's armed forces, Air Chief Marshal Sir Jock Stirrup, and Defense Secretary Des Browne released a joint statement Monday expressing their condolences for the fallen British soldiers - and insisting their forces were beating back the insurgent threat.
"Make no mistake, the Taliban influence is waning, and through British blood, determination and grit, a window of opportunity has been opened," Stirrup said.
Thousands of new troops have poured into Afghanistan to try to stabilize the country, and fighting has been fierce in Helmand, the insurgent stronghold where British forces are deployed.
As of Saturday, at least 443 members of the U.S. military had died in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Uzbekistan as a result of the U.S. invasion that toppled the ruling Taliban.
Last year saw a record level of violence, with more than 8,000 people killed in insurgency-related attacks - the most since the 2001 invasion. Violence has claimed more than 1,500 lives this year.
On Sunday, insurgents attacked a police convoy in Ghazni province, killing 11 police and wounding one, said the province's deputy governor, Kazim Allayar.
In the past two years militant fighters have stepped up attacks on Afghanistan's fledgling police, who have little training or weapons. Last year more than 900 police were killed in militant attacks.
Journalists, too, have faced grave danger from Taliban militants and local strongmen unhappy with negative news coverage amid the increase in violence. The British Broadcasting Corp. said one of its reporters, Abdul Samad Rohani, was found with a gun shot wound to the head in a cemetery on Sunday. He went missing in the town of Lashkar Gar in Helmand province the previous day.
Rohani worked for the BBC World Service's Pashto language service. BBC world news editor Jon Williams called his death "a terrible loss."
"Rohani's courage and dedication have been a key part of the BBC's reporting from Afghanistan in recent years. His bravery - and that of his colleagues - have allowed us to tell a key story for audiences in the U.K., in Afghanistan and around the world," Williams said in a statement from London.
The Helmand provincial police chief, Mohammad Hussein Andiwal, said officials were investigating the death and had not named any suspects.
Taliban insurgents have kidnapped and killed Afghan journalists in recent years, but a spokesman for the militants, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, said the Taliban was not behind the Rohani's killing. Ahmadi said that the Taliban did not have any problem with Rohani's reporting and that he was upset about the reporter's death.
Rohani was at least the fourth journalist killed in Afghanistan in the past year.
He was the second journalist working for the BBC to found dead during the past weekend, after gunmen in southern Somalia killed local reporter Nasteex Dahir Farah, who also contributed to other news organizations including The Associated Press.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Troup -
Noun
1. A group or company of people, animals, or things. 2.
a. A group of soldiers.
b. troops Military units; soldiers.
c. A unit of cavalry, armored vehicles, or artillery in a European army, corresponding to a platoon in the U.S. Army.
3. A unit of at least five Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts under the guidance of an adult leader.
4. A great many; a lot.
Posted by CBS_Oliver at 06:08 AM : Jun 09, 2008
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Yeah, but what''s a "troop"?
troop - noun - A Fire and Forget Weapon invented by the Bush and Cheney Administration to fight evil Islam in the Evangelical Christian Jihad leading towards the End Times and the Rapture.
Give me a break....
Maybe the Brits should think about extricating themselves from the counterproductive war of choice/profit in Afghanistan.