Afghanistan: Nine US troops & 24 others - killed as insurgents attack remote base close to Pakistan border
· Day-long battle follows militant attack on outpost
· Biggest loss of American lives in three years
The Nato-led effort to subdue the insurgents suffered one of its heaviest blows since the 2001 invasion yesterday when nine US soldiers were killed and 15 other Nato troops injured in a day-long battle in a region close to the Pakistan border.
The US troops died as their base came under attack in Kunar province, eastern Afghanistan. The news puts further pressure on Pakistan, where coalition forces believe many insurgent militants are based. It was among the biggest losses for the coalition since the start of the war.
Insurgents have killed nine US soldiers in an assault on an Afghan army and NATO outpost in north-eastern Afghanistan overnight, making it one of the worst days for foreign troops casualties in the country since 2001.
Afghanistan is suffering from a rising tide of violence this year, with a sharp increase in Taliban attacks, especially in the east where NATO says militants have taken advantage of peace deals in Pakistan to cross the border and fight in Afghanistan.
"The fighting began in the early morning hours and continued into the day as insurgents were repulsed from an Afghan National Army and ISAF combat outpost," a statement by the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said.
The dead soldiers were all American, a NATO official said.
Fifteen ISAF troops and four Afghan soldiers were also wounded in the fighting.
"Although no final assessment has been made, it is believed insurgents suffered heavy casualties during several hours of fighting," it said.
The fighting took place in the north-eastern province of Kunar, close to the border with Pakistan and also to neighbouring Nuristan province.
Afghan authorities said earlier in the day five Pakistani Taliban were killed and 13 more wounded after they infiltrated Nuristan province on Saturday (local time).
The Defence Ministry said dozens of insurgents were killed and dozens more wounded in a counter-attack by the Afghan army in Nuristan on Sunday.
ISAF said they had no record of any fighting in Nuristan on Sunday, so it was not clear whether Afghan authorities were referring to the same clashes which the NATO force said were in a nearby area of Kunar province.
Rising violence
Separately on Sunday, a roadside bomb killed a US coalition soldier in the southern province of Helmand.
At least 40 militants were killed as Afghan and coalition troops returned fire and called in airstrikes, the US military said in a statement.
Growing insecurity has added to the frustration of many Afghans more than six years after US-led and Afghan forces overthrew the Taliban government after it refused to hand over Al Qaeda leaders behind the September 11 attacks on the United States.
A Taliban suicide bomber killed at least 17 civilians, most of them children, and four police in a bazaar in southern Afghanistan on Sunday, police said.
Taliban suicide bombs have killed more than 230 civilians and wounded nearly 500 already this year, NATO says.
In the latest attack the bomber, travelling on a motorcycle, targeted a police vehicle in a bazaar in the Deh Rawood district of Uruzgan province. the said.
"Seventeen civilians and four policemen died in the attack. Thirty-seven more civilians and five police have been wounded," provincial police chief Juma Khan Himat said.
Most of the civilian victims were children, he said.
The Interior Ministry in Kabul put the death toll higher.
It said 24 people, four of them police, including a senior officer, were killed in the attack.
Editorial note: Suicide and killing of innocent people is not a part of Islam or any recognized religion. Human retaliation against others for vengence is demonstrated all around the world and cannot be properly attributed to any particular religion - rather a lack of following proper teachings of religions everywhere.