April 9, 2010 8:16 AM

U.S. Helicopter Crash in Afghanistan Kills 4

Updated at 2:29 a.m. Eastern.

A U.S. Air Force helicopter crashed late Thursday in Afghanistan's southeast, killing at least four people and wounding "numerous" others, the military said.

A spokesman for the Taliban said its fighters had shot it down, but an Afghan official said it appeared to have crashed due to mechanical failure.

The U.S. military released a statement saying an American CV-22 Osprey had crashed in southern Afghanistan late Thursday night, killing three U.S. troops, a civilian employee of unconfirmed nationality, and injuring "numerous other servicemembers."

Air Force officials said the cause of the crash was still being investigated.

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The CV-22 Osprey uses tilt-rotor design allows it to take off as a helicopter but fly more like a propeller airplane once airborne, making it faster than most other military helicopters. According to the Air Force, the craft generally "conducts long range infiltration and resupply for U.S. Forces."

A NATO spokesman said only that the helicopter went down overnight in the southeastern province of Zabul, and that no other details were known about the incident, which was under investigation.

A Zabul government spokesman, Mohhamed Jahn Rasuliyar, first said the helicopter appeared to have been shot down, but changed that later to say the cause appeared to have been technical failure.

The U.S. military said casualties had been transported to a nearby military base for treatment. The military's statement indicated that all U.S. personnel had been accounted for.

The helicopter crash came just two days after the Taliban posted video of a man identified as Pfc. Bowe Bergdahl, an American soldier captured in Afghanistan last June. It shows him pleading to be returned home and saying the war in Afghanistan is not worth the human cost.

NATO commanders in Afghanistan said Thursday the release of the video showing Bergdahl only inspires further efforts to find the man.

Rasuliyar said the crash site was about 7 miles from the provincial capital of Qalat, further away than originally reported. He said there were reports of four deaths among those aboard the chopper, the type of which he did not know.

Qari Yusuf Ahmedi, a spokesman for the Taliban insurgency that is active in the area, said militants had shot down the aircraft around midnight. The report could not be independently confirmed and the insurgents have a history of false and exaggerated claims designed to promote their cause of driving foreign forces from the country.

Choppers are used extensively by both NATO and the Afghan government forces to transport and supply troops spread out across a mountainous country with few roads. Losses have been relatively light, despite insurgent fire and difficult conditions and most crashes have been accidents caused by maintenance problems or factors such as dust.

Lacking shoulder-fired missiles and other anti-aircraft weapons, the Taliban rely mainly on machine guns and rocket propelled grenades to target helicopters at their most vulnerable during landings and takeoffs.

One of the heaviest single-day losses of life for allied forces occurred on June 28, 2005, when 16 U.S. troops died aboard a Special Forces MH-47 Chinook helicopter that was shot down by insurgents.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by rwsmith29456 April 9, 2010 9:23 PM EDT
Development of the V-22 has been strewn with numerous accidents for many years. As useful as it is it is hard to keep in the air. And they are helicopters only when they take off and land.
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by formrusmcsgt April 9, 2010 8:52 AM EDT
by underdogus2009 April 9, 2010 8:42 AM EDT
The billions being wasted on troop surges, cash handouts to citizens ....
--
Along side the billions wasted on handouts to Israel as well...
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by underdogus2009 April 9, 2010 8:42 AM EDT
The billions being
wasted on troop surges, cash handouts to citizens and the pervasive
corruption of Afghanistan adds up to a futile effort.
When will we ever learn?
Reply to this comment
by dblbar1 April 9, 2010 8:42 AM EDT
My heart goes out to the families of the American troops who were killed. Please know you and your loved ones will be in my prayers.
Reply to this comment
by goirish1974 April 9, 2010 9:11 AM EDT
Amen.
by underdogus2009 April 9, 2010 8:41 AM EDT
We are not learning from history. The Taliban have time
and terrain on their side. They will fight to defend themselves from the
hegemony of the invader, to the last man. We shall, regrettably, at great
cost to our treasury and the lives of young troops, fail to win any
significant "victories" in this God-forsaken country.....
Reply to this comment
by underdogus2009 April 9, 2010 8:39 AM EDT
One small area of Afghanistan now in the control of coalition forces.
The Taliban has been routed....for the time being, but they'll always
come back. They will never give up their fight for their Homeland.
Just ask Gengkis Khan, the British and the Russians about "winning" a war
in Afghanistan......
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by underdogus2009 April 9, 2010 8:26 AM EDT
This "crash" raises the number of foreign troops who have died during the war in Afghanistan this year to 151.
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by underdogus2009 April 9, 2010 8:22 AM EDT
Afghanistan where Empires go to die......
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by wot90s April 9, 2010 7:51 AM EDT
Does the Military really think the American People are that stupid. What about the men and women who maintain these aircraft. How does that make them feel when a craft goes down, and the Military wants to blame mechanical failure. No, dont blame the mechanics, give us the truth, if the plane was shot down, say it.
Get transparency in the War and tell us what really goes on in the foreign countries when our children are being killed.
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by sandy19731 April 9, 2010 9:39 AM EDT
Nobody blamed the mechanics. Are the mechanics being blamed for Toyota's problems? It is probably the design, or maybe just happenstance. If it is the mechanic's fault - don't you think somebody should know?
by Skruffy1 April 9, 2010 6:14 AM EDT
CBS, just a technicality, but the Osprey isn't a helicopter. You do explain in the story what it is, but a helicopter it isn't.
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