Author Topic: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash  (Read 436 times)

blacken700

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Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- More than two dozen American troops are believed to have died in the deadly helicopter crash in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, a U.S. military official told CNN.

Many, if not all, were special operations forces, the official said. If the numbers are confirmed, the incident would be the most deadly for coalition forces in the Afghan war, according to a CNN count of international troop deaths.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai issued a statement saying as many as 31 U.S. special forces and seven Afghans were killed and offered "deep regret" to U.S. President Barack Obama.

"My thoughts and prayers go out to the families and loved ones of the Americans who were lost earlier today in Afghanistan," Obama said in a statement. "We also mourn the Afghans who died alongside our troops in pursuit of a more peaceful and hopeful future for their country."

The Taliban claimed militants downed the helicopter with a rocket-propelled grenade. Mohammad Hazrat Janan, head of the provincial council said Tangi village elders reported that insurgents shot at the craft when it was flying back from an operation.

The incident took place in the eastern province of Wardak, an area rife with insurgent activity. There has been a swell of recent attacks in the country's southern and eastern provinces.

The crash comes just as NATO is drawing down and handing over security control to national forces. Ten thousand U.S. soldiers are scheduled to depart by year's end, while the full drawn-down is expected to take place by the end of 2014.

Army to reduce deployment time

However, NATO's International Security Assistance Force has not said how the incident occurred. ISAF spokesman Justin Brockhoff confirmed the crash and acknowledged the helicopter had been flying in area where there was reported insurgent activity, but declined to offer additional details.

Officials are being especially tight-lipped because recovery operations at the site are still under way and body identifications and family notifications are just beginning, the U.S. military official said.

Last month, a NATO helicopter was brought down by insurgent fire in the country's eastern province of Kunar. The Taliban also claimed responsibility for that attack, though no injuries were reported.

In a separate incident, a NATO service member died Saturday after an improvised explosive device detonated in southern Afghanistan.

Elsewhere Saturday, a joint Afghan and coalition force conducted raids in the eastern province of Nangarhar, killing "several insurgents," NATO reported.

The operation also targeted a "Taliban facilitator," who NATO says was responsible for supplying ammunition and bomb-making materials to the Taliban.

In July, a series of gun battles in Nangarhar between insurgents and NATO forces left at least 10 militants dead.

Currently, there are 150,000 ISAF forces in Afghanistan, including nearly 100,000 from the United States -- the largest NATO presence in the region since the U.S.-led war began in 2001.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/08/06/afghanistan.nato.helicopter.crash/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Soul Crusher

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #1 on: August 06, 2011, 07:28:56 AM »
RIP to everyone.   25 SEALS.    FUCK! 



Soul Crusher

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #2 on: August 06, 2011, 07:31:50 AM »
Crash Adds to Growing Doubts About Afghan War
 Crash Adds to Growing Doubts About Afghan War
By Yochi J. Dreazen



The deadly crash of a U.S. helicopter in eastern Afghanistan earlier today will fuel the growing questions about the Obama administration’s handling of the long war—and the public’s nagging sense, evident in recent polls, that the conflict is simply not worth its enormous human and financial cost.

Military officials are continuing to probe why the American Chinook helicopter went down in eastern Afghanistan’s volatile Wardak province early Saturday, killing at least 31 U.S. troops in the largest single-day loss of American forces since the Afghan war began in 2001. More American troops died in the crash than have typically been killed in entire months of the grueling conflict.

The Taliban immediately claimed responsibility for shooting down the helicopter, and three military officials in Afghanistan told National Journal that early indications were that the chopper had been taken down by a surface-to-air missile. In a written statement, the U.S.-led military coalition in Afghanistan said there had been “enemy activity” in the areas of the crash but that the exact cause remained under investigation.

The crash comes amid a spate of grim news from Afghanistan, the Obama administration’s primary national-security focus. National Journal reported last week that the number of IED attacks in the country soared to a record high of 1,600 in June, killing dozens of coalition troops, because of the free flow of bomb-making materials from neighboring Pakistan. A recent government watchdog report, meanwhile, found that an inability to properly control the billions of dollars of American aid flowing into Afghanistan every year means some of that money could be inadvertently fueling the Afghan insurgency.

The rapidly rising U.S. death toll in Afghanistan—paired with a lack of discernible military progress there—is raising new questions about President Obama’s war policy. During the 2008 presidential campaign, Obama accused then-President George W. Bush of shortchanging the Afghan war effort in favor of the Iraq War and promised to significantly boost U.S. troop levels if elected. Since taking office, Obama has more than tripled the number of American forces in Afghanistan, including a surge of 33,000 U.S. reinforcements last year.

<SNIP>

http://nationaljournal.com/nationalsecurity/crash-adds-...
 

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Fury

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #3 on: August 06, 2011, 07:34:21 AM »
We decimated Al-Qaeda and the Taliban and killed Bin Laden. Why are we still there?

Nation building NEVER works when you're dealing with third-world trash.

Soul Crusher

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #4 on: August 06, 2011, 07:35:04 AM »
We decimated Al-Qaeda and the Taliban and killed Bin Laden. Why are we still there?

Nation building NEVER works when you're dealing with third-world trash.



2 Billion a week we can't afford.   

tonymctones

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #5 on: August 06, 2011, 11:38:10 AM »
HOLY SHIT!!!

a blackass thread that doesnt involve cut and paste from media matters about fox news???

are you fuking serious?

wtf???

blacken700

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #6 on: August 06, 2011, 12:05:06 PM »
HOLY SHIT!!!

a blackass thread that doesnt involve cut and paste from media matters about fox news???

are you fuking serious?

wtf???

 HOLY SHIT!!!         i would like to say one of your post without a retarded responce.but i can't  :D :D

tonymctones

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #7 on: August 06, 2011, 01:01:44 PM »
HOLY SHIT!!!         i would like to say one of your post without a retarded responce.but i can't  :D :D
reread that and try again...

Freeborn126

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #8 on: August 08, 2011, 06:20:20 AM »
This stinks to high heaven.  No way this is a coincidence.  More evidence that the OBL hit was a farce.  The same SEAL team that did the hit on Obama gets wiped out a few months later?  Probably got shot down with a stinger missile that we gave the mujahadeen back in the 80s. 
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OzmO

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Re: U.S. official: More than two dozen U.S. deaths in Afghan copter crash
« Reply #9 on: August 08, 2011, 07:40:45 AM »
This stinks to high heaven.  No way this is a coincidence.  More evidence that the OBL hit was a farce.  The same SEAL team that did the hit on Obama gets wiped out a few months later?  Probably got shot down with a stinger missile that we gave the mujahadeen back in the 80s. 

From what I read earlier it wasnt the same people who were on the OBL raid but it was peoplel from the same unit.

So you think the OBL thing was faked?