Pentagon spokesman confirms attack in Kandahar targeted convoy of foreign forces
Two U.S. soldiers were killed in Afghanistan’s restive southern province of Kandahar on Wednesday when a Taliban suicide bomber rammed a vehicle filled with explosives into a convoy of foreign forces.
“Two U.S. service members were killed in action in Kandahar, Afghanistan, when their convoy came under attack,” Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis said. “U.S. Forces Afghanistan will provide additional information as it becomes available,” he added.
The assault is the latest blow to NATO forces, who ended their more than a decade-long combat mission in Afghanistan at the end of 2014. Since then Afghan troops and police, beset by soaring casualties, have struggled to beat back the resurgent Taliban, while facing the growing menace of the Islamic State group.
Afghan officials said the attack, which was quickly claimed by the Taliban in a text message to AFP, happened around noon in the Daman area of Kandahar. NATO confirmed in a statement that a convoy was attacked and did “cause casualties” but did not immediately give further details.
At least one witness reported seeing three bodies pulled from one of the vehicles.
Mohammad Azim, a shopkeeper, told AFP: “I saw a foreign forces vehicle on fire after the attack. A while later helicopters landed in the area, they took three bodies out of the vehicle and flew away. There were three armored vehicles in the convoy.”
The Taliban have a heavy presence in poppy-growing Kandahar province and have launched repeated attacks there. They have been ramping up their campaign against beleaguered government forces, underscoring rising insecurity in the war-torn country during the summer fighting season, when the warmer weather tends to spur an increase in militant attacks.
Early last month a U.S. soldier was killed and two others wounded in an attack in Kandahar’s neighboring Helmand province while conducting operations against the Taliban. Private First Class Hansen Kirkpatrick, 19, of Wasilla, Alaska died following the “indirect fire” assault, which means he was hit by a mortar or some other incoming round.
The attacks come as United States President Donald Trump weighs sending more American troops to Afghanistan nearly 16 years after the U.S. invasion to topple the Taliban regime. U.S. troops in Afghanistan now number about 8,400, and there are another 5,000 from NATO allies, a far cry from the U.S. presence of more than 100,000 six years ago. They mainly serve as trainers and advisers.
American military commanders in Afghanistan have requested thousands of extra boots on the ground and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is believed to be close to presenting a new U.S. military strategy for Afghanistan to Trump.
Tuesday’s attack came a day after suicide bombers throwing grenades killed more than 30 Shia worshippers at a mosque in Afghanistan’s main western city of Herat. No one claimed responsibility for the assault but I.S. has regularly attacked Shia Muslims over the past year as it tries to make inroads in Afghanistan following setbacks in the Middle East, leaving Afghan forces and its international allies facing a twin Taliban and I.S. insurgency.