The Phnom Penh Post

NATO raid kills 30 civilians as Taliban assault Kunduz

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A NATO airstrike killed at least 30 Afghan civilians, including women and children, yesterday in the volatile northern province of Kunduz, officials said, after a Taliban assault there left two American soldiers dead.

The airstrike, which occurred early yesterday, triggered emotionall­y charged protests in the provincial capital, with the victims’ relatives rallying outside the governor’s office while carrying the bodies of dead children. The carnage underscore­s worsening insecurity after the Taliban last month overran Kunduz city for the second time in a year, as NATO-backed Afghan forces struggle to beat back the insurgents.

“Afghan forces and coalition troops conducted a joint operation against the Taliban insurgents,” provincial spokesman Mahmood Danish said. “In the bombardmen­t 30 Afghan civilians were martyred and 25 others were wounded.”

Police spokesman Mahmoodull­ah Akbari gave the same toll, adding that the dead included infants aged as young as three months and other children. “They were asleep when their house came under attack by coalition troops,” Akbari said.

In a brief statement on Twitter, NATO conceded that it was behind the deadly airstrike.

“Airstrikes were conducted in #Kunduz to defend friendly forces under fire. All civilian casualty claims will be investigat­ed,” it said.

The strike occurred on the outskirts of the city after a firefight killed two US soldiers and three Afghan special forces during an anti-Taliban operation in Kunduz. It was not immediatel­y clear if the two incidents were related.

The firefight occurred as American soldiers were assisting Afghan troops to clear a Taliban position and disrupt the group’s operations in Kunduz, US forces said in a separate statement.

“On behalf of all of US Forces – Afghanista­n, today’s loss is heartbreak­ing and we offer our deepest condolence­s to the families and friends of our service members who lost their lives today,” said John Nicholson, the top US and NATO commander in Afghanista­n. “Despite today’s tragic event, we are steadfast in our commitment to help our Afghan partners defend their nation.”

Forgotten conflict

The killings come just days before the US presidenti­al election.

During three lengthy debates between presidenti­al candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, Afghanista­n got scarcely a passing mention – even though the situation there will be an urgent matter for the new president.

Either one of them will inherit America’s longest war with no end in sight.

The US military, which leads a NATO mission to train and assist local forces after their combat mission ended in 2014, often gives upbeat assessment­s about Afghan military performanc­e.

But as Afghan military forces near the end of a second year leading security operations without full NATO assistance, they are sustaining heavy casualties.

The Taliban’s apparent strategic goal in 2016 is to seize another provincial capital like they brief ly did in Kunduz last year, in a stinging blow to Afghan forces.

 ?? BASHIR KHAN SAFI/AFP ?? An Afghan man carries the dead body of a child (centre) following a NATO coalition airstrike in Kunduz yesterday.
BASHIR KHAN SAFI/AFP An Afghan man carries the dead body of a child (centre) following a NATO coalition airstrike in Kunduz yesterday.

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