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Spanish PM makes surprise visit to Afghanistan

NATO soldier dies in Afghanistan
Kabul (AFP) Nov 6, 2010 - A foreign soldier was killed Saturday fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan, NATO said. The death brings to 623 the number of international troops killed in the war so far this year, compared to 521 for all of 2009. The toll is based on a running tally kept by the independent icasualties.org website. NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said the soldier "died following an insurgent attack in southern Afghanistan". No further details were provided. NATO and the United States, with more than 150,000 troops deployed to Afghanistan, have been battling the Taliban-led insurgency for more than nine years, since the Islamists were toppled from power after ruling for five years.
by Staff Writers
Madrid (AFP) Nov 6, 2010
Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero made an unannounced visit to Afghanistan Saturday and said Spanish troops were not there to stay.

"The mission in Afghanistan is an arduous task which demands time," he said at the Spanish base at Qala-i-Naw in western Afghanistan in comments broadcast on Spanish public radio.

"We are not here to stay but we have a firm commitment until the Afghans can guarantee their own security. When we achieve this they will have won a better future and we all will have gained a more secure future."

Zapatero visited Spanish troops serving with NATO-led international forces, accompanied by Spanish Defence Minister Carme Chacon and Foreign Minister Trinidad Jimenez.

It was his second visit to Afghanistan since he took office in 2004.

Spain has some 1,500 troops serving in the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, according to the ISAF website, part of a 141,000-strong force deployed in Afghanistan to battle a Taliban-led insurgency nearing the end of its ninth year.

The Spanish contingent runs a US-led civil-military operation known as a Provincial Reconstruction Team.

earlier related report
NATO probes report that Afghan soldier shot foreign troops
Kabul (AFP) Nov 6, 2010 - NATO said Saturday it was investigating reports that an Afghan soldier had shot and killed foreign troops, while a NATO official said on condition of anonymity that two US Marines had died.

The alliance's media office said it was aware of "the incident in Helmand province," which was reported by Pakistan-based Afghan news agency Afghan Islamic Press (AIP).

A team from ISAF and the Afghan government "is investigating the incident" but could provide no further details, NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) told AFP in a brief statement.

A NATO official who spoke on condition of anonymity said two US Marines were killed in the "green-on-green" incident, late on Thursday night.

"They weren't shot in their beds, they must have been on guard duty," the official said.

"Rounds were fired within the FOB (forward operating base) and an Afghan soldier was found to be missing the next morning," he said.

The Afghan soldier had joined the FOB within the last "two or three weeks and not a lot was known about him," he said.

Helmand's deputy police chief Colonel Kamaludin Khan said earlier: "We know that an army soldier opened fire on ISAF forces but we don't know the details."

AIP is not generally regarded as reliable and often publishes Taliban propaganda.

In a report early Saturday, AIP quoted a Taliban spokesman saying an Afghan soldier had "shot and killed three foreign troops at a base in Sangin district of Helmand".

"The ANA soldier opened fire on foreign troops at base in Tamirano area close to the headquarters of Sangin last night, killing three foreign soldiers, Qari Muhammad Yousuf Ahmadi, spokesman of Taliban, told Afghan Islamic Press," the report said.

It quoted Ahmadi saying the "soldier fled the base and joined Taliban".

Incidents in which Afghan soldiers or police officers turn on Western troops are rare, but raise questions about the multi-billion-dollar international effort to train and mentor Afghanistan's security forces.

In July a renegade Afghan soldier shot and killed three British army Gurkhas and wounded several others on a base in Helmand province.

That incident followed another in November last year, in which an Afghan policeman shot dead five British soldiers at a checkpoint, also in Helmand where most of Britain's troops are based.

The United States and NATO have more than 150,000 troops in Afghanistan fighting the insurgency, which is concnetrated in the southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar.

More than 600 foreign soldiers have been killed in the Afghan war so far this year, compared with 521 in 2009.



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THE STANS
UN's ex-envoy in Afghanistan backs talks with Taliban
Oslo (AFP) Nov 4, 2010
The UN's former envoy in Afghanistan threw his weight Thursday behind dialogue between Afghan authorities and the Taliban to reach a peaceful solution to a conflict he said neither side could win. "The time has come to embrace a more fully pledged process of dialogue with the insurgency," former United Nations special representative Kai Eide said at a press conference in Oslo to launch his n ... read more







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