Showing posts with label troops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label troops. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 August 2010

Watch As the US troops depart, bombs rip through Iraq

As the US troops depart, bombs rip through Iraq


US soldiers at the site of an explosion yesterday in Kut, 100 miles south-east of Baghdad. A suicide car bomber killed at least 19 people and wounded scores in the attack on a police station, a police officer said
Al-Qa'ida showed that it has the strength to strike all over Iraq yesterday by making a string of attacks that left at least 56 dead, half of them policemen and soldiers, and 250 wounded, across at least thirteen cities and towns.

The bombings came a day after the US cut the number of its troops in Iraq to below 50,000 and withdrew the last of its combat brigades. The attacks undermine the Iraqi government's claim to have succeeded in greatly improving security and weakening al-Qa'ida.

The heaviest casualties were in the city of Kut, 100 miles southeast of Baghdad on the Tigris river. A suicide bomber in a car penetrated security barriers and detonated his explosives between a police station and provincial government headquarters, killing 19 people, 15 of them policemen.
coppied by http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/as-the-us-troops-depart-bombs-rip-through-iraq-2062208.html

Wednesday, 25 August 2010

Afghan policeman shot and killed two Spanish Troops Die in Afghan Shooting

Afghan policeman shot and killed two Spanish Troops Die in Afghan Shooting

KABUL—An Afghan policeman shot and killed two Spanish soldiers and an international interpreter before security forces shot him dead during an army training exercise in northwestern Afghanistan on Wednesday, Afghan and international officials said.

The deaths are the latest in a string of incidents in which Afghan forces have fired on their international mentors during training exercises.

Afghan policemen stand near the skeletal remains of a burnt truck in Badghis province. Afghan police and Spanish troops clashed early Wednesday outside a base in western Afghanistan

Hundreds of Afghans poured into the streets after rumors spread of the death of an Afghan during the exercise, setting fire to government buildings in Badghis province's Qalay-I-Naw district and attacking a nearby military base operated by Spanish troops, local officials said.

The shooting occurred at about 9:20 a.m., officials said. The nationality of the interpreter wasn't known.

In a statement, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization said the cause of the shooting was still unclear, though it said reports indicate a member of the Afghan national police fired several rounds and NATO forces returned fire.

The Afghan policeman involved in the shooting may have been a Taliban insurgent, said Sharafuddin Mujadidi, a spokesman for the provincial government of Badghis. A spokesman for the Taliban couldn't be reached to comment.

Mr. Mujadidi said hundreds of Afghan civilians, chanting antigovernment and anti-NATO slogan, tried to enter the base after the gunbattle. "Afghan security forces quickly reacted and cordoned the base, dispersing the mob," he said.


Spanish soldiers patrol near a coal mine in Herat province in western Afghanistan in March.

A NATO official said there were still hundreds of Afghans demonstrating around the military base in Badghis province in the afternoon.

Taliban infiltration among the Afghan police and army is still a major concern despite efforts by Afghan and coalition forces to more thoroughly vet recruits, recently implementing biometric registration to weed out possible insurgents and criminals.

But last month, an Afghan soldier shot and killed two U.S. civilian army trainers and one Afghan during a training exercise, one of several similar incidents throughout the country.

The deaths Wednesday bring to 30 the number of Spanish fatalities in the nine-year U.S.-led war, out of 2,030 international troops, according to icasualties.org. So far this month, 52 members of coalition forces have died, with 30 of those fatalities American.

Violence has picked up in northern and western Afghanistan, which were considered to be quiet by coalition forces who have focused the majority of their troop surge in the southern and eastern parts of the country.

U.S. President Barack Obama ordered for 30,000 U.S. troops to be deployed in the country in December as U.S. forces draw down from Iraq.

—Habib Zahori and Habib Totakhil contributed to this article.

Coppied by http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704540904575451121620463004.html?mod=WSJEUROPE_hpp_MIDDLETopNews

Monday, 16 August 2010

Iraq: US troops leave with a latte


A U.S. soldier walks past Iraqi military police vehicles lined up at a U.S. army base west of Baghdad on July 29, 2010. (Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty Images)
We are saw this Iraq: US troops leave with a latte
At Victory Base Camp in Baghdad, soldiers from the last American combat brigade in Iraq are packing up their coffee grinders, their pirated DVDs and their tangled memories for the long journey home.

They line up outside the Green Bean coffee shop ("Honor First, Coffee Second") in 90 degree evening heat for the smoothies and lattes that have replaced the packets of instant coffee dissolved in purified water that were popular in the early days of the war back in 2003.

Most of them haven’t fired a shot in combat during their entire deployment over the past year. Most, but not all, are happy about that.

Over the past seven years, the military invaded a country, denied there was an insurgency, fought an insurgency and largely subdued it, but some of these latest soldiers to serve here have never made it off the base.
Coppied by http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/iraq/100813/iraq-us-troops-leave-latte