San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Taliban claim responsibi­lity for death of U.S. soldier

- By Amir Shah

KABUL, Afghanista­n — An American service member was killed in action in Afghanista­n, the U.S. military said Saturday without offering details about the service member’s identity or the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the death.

In a telephone interview, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahed said the militant group was behind the killing, even as U.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad has been holding talks with the Taliban in recent weeks to try and negotiate an end to the war in Afghanista­n. The current conflict began in 2001 with the U.S.led invasion to unseat the Taliban and hunt down alQaeda leader Osama bin Laden. After nearly 18 years, it is America’s longest war, in which more than 2,400 American service members have died.

Mujahed said two U.S. service personnel were killed when Taliban militants attacked a tank in Sayed Abad district of central Wardak province, barely 40 miles south of the Afghan capital, Kabul. The discrepanc­y between the number of fatalities given by the U.S. and the Taliban could not immediatel­y be explained, but the Taliban often exaggerate their claims.

Separately, a gun battle in the capital of Badghis province in the country’s northwest left three police dead, provincial governor Abdul Ghafur Malikzai said. Militants attacked a government compound in the provincial capital, QalaeNaw, from a position in a nearby hotel. Hours after the firing began, Malikzai said the attack was over and two militants were killed and two arrested. The number of wounded rose to 20, he said. It still wasn’t known who was behind the attack.

Afghanista­n’s police and military personnel come under neardaily attacks and have suffered staggering casualties in recent months, most often at the hands of Taliban insurgents, who say the war will continue as long as U.S. and NATO forces are still in Afghanista­n.

Earlier on Saturday, the Islamic State group’s affiliate in Afghanista­n claimed responsibi­lity for a suicide attack Friday at a wedding in eastern Nangarhar province. The bomber, a 13yearold boy, killed six people and wounded several others. Police said the attack targeted Malik Toor, a progovernm­ent militia commander, who was killed in the blast.

The Islamic State affiliate is headquarte­red in eastern Afghanista­n and is slowly expanding into the mountains of nearby Kunar and Nuristan provinces, also in eastern Afghanista­n.

Amir Shah is an Associated Press writer.

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