Albuquerque Journal

Errant U.S. airstrike kills 16 from police unit in Afghanista­n

Taliban raid also kills 40 Afghans

- LOS ANGELES TIMES

KABUL, Afghanista­n — A U.S. airstrike mistakenly hit an Afghan police unit in the southern province of Helmand, killing 16 police officers and wounding two others, the provincial governor’s office said Saturday.

The Pentagon confirmed that coalition forces had launched the errant strike on Friday near the town of Gereshk, where U.S. and Afghan forces have been engaged in close combat with Taliban insurgents.

“We would like to express our deepest condolence­s to the families affected by this unfortunat­e incident,” the U.S. military in Afghanista­n said in a statement.

The statement said the airstrikes came during a U.S.-supported Afghan operation in which Afghan security personnel had gathered in a compound. The U.S. military said it would conduct an investigat­ion.

Officials in Helmand said that the police unit that was struck had reached Gereshk to support Afghan soldiers and police fighting to keep Taliban insurgents from entering the town.

As the battle unfolded, Afghan forces requested an airstrike by their U.S. allies, which hit a compound where the police unit was gathered.

“We are still trying to find out why the incident took place and whose fault it was,” said Omar Zwak, spokesman for the Helmand governor.

Police officials said they were investigat­ing the incident, which occurred about five miles outside Gereshk, north of the provincial capital of Lashkar Gah.

Most of Helmand, a poppy-growing region that has long been strategica­lly important for the Taliban, is controlled by insurgents. Afghan forces, backed by U.S. warplanes and ground troops, have battled for months to regain territory and keep the provincial capital from falling into Taliban hands.

Also Saturday, officials said that more than 40 Afghan government­backed militiamen were killed in a Taliban raid that captured a district in the remote northeaste­rn province of Badakhshan.

Ahmad Faisal Begzad, governor of Badakhshan, said that members of the Afghan Local Police, a U.S.-funded government militia, and other progovernm­ent fighters were killed in the attack Friday in the district of Tagab.

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