Santa Fe New Mexican

Roadside explosion kills 3 U.S. soldiers in Afghanista­n

Taliban claims responsibi­lity

- By Nesar Azadzoi and Rod Nordland

GHAZNI, Afghanista­n — Three American soldiers were killed on Tuesday in a bombing in Afghanista­n, the U.S. military said, in the worst loss of life in the country for the United States this year. Three other soldiers and an American contractor were wounded.

The deaths took place near Ghazni City, in the southeaste­rn province of the same name, from the detonation of a roadside bomb, the military said in a statement. A witness said the bomb went off as a U.S. convoy passed on the highway.

“The convoy set off a roadside mine, and there was smoke all over the place. It nearly took our lives, too,” said the witness, Haji Abdulamin, a local resident. “The road was blocked, and a few minutes later helicopter­s landed and took the dead.”

A taxi driver named Hamed who was on the highway said he saw a U.S. vehicle that had been destroyed by the bomb. “The situation was not good, and the helicopter­s were bombing the area,” he said. “I think six or seven Taliban were killed too.”

The Taliban issued a statement claiming responsibi­lity for the late morning attack.

The events came only three days after another American soldier was killed in the southweste­rn province of Nimroz during a fight with militants linked to al-Qaida, the military said in a statement. The military also said that the soldier, Sgt. Leandro A.S. Jasso, a 25-year-old Army Ranger from Washington state, was shot accidental­ly by a soldier from an Afghan “partner force.” It added, “There were no indication­s he was shot intentiona­lly.”

The three soldiers killed on Tuesday were not identified, in line with U.S. policy to wait until 24 hours after the next of kin are notified, but they were believed to be part of a Special Forces unit fighting the Taliban in Ghazni province. The military said the four Americans who were wounded in the explosion were evacuated for medical treatment.

It was the worst attack on U.S. troops in Afghanista­n this year. It brings to 13 the number of service members who have been killed in 2018, many of them in insider attacks blamed on infiltrato­rs or turncoats among allied Afghan military forces. In August, a suicide bomber killed three Czech soldiers as they patrolled near the Bagram military base.

A Czech soldier was also killed in an attack by an Afghan soldier in the western province of Herat last month, and a military investigat­ion is underway into whether his killer was beaten or tortured to death while in military custody. The American Green Beret unit at the scene has been sent back to the United States, officials said.

Ghazni officials said there had been heavy fighting throughout the province in recent days. Commandos backed by U.S. Special Forces and air power killed dozens of Taliban fighters, said Mohammad Arif Noori, the spokesman for the province’s governor. At the same time, however, separate Taliban attacks on Afghan National Army bases have killed at least seven security force members in the past two days, Noori said.

Ghazni city was the scene of a determined attack by the Taliban in August, and the insurgents also control or threaten much of the rest of the province.

While U.S. and coalition casualties in Afghanista­n have dropped sharply over the past several years, Afghan security force casualties have risen dramatical­ly. Figures released by President Ashraf Ghani show that about 25 Afghan soldiers or police officers are killed every day.

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