8 Americans, 5 Canadians killed in Afghan bombings (Lead)
December 31st, 2009 - 12:53 pm ICT by IANS
Washington, Dec 31 (DPA) At least eight US civilians were killed in an attack on a military base in Khost province in eastern Afghanistan, the US State Department said.
State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said the attack took place Wednesday on a US military base near the Pakistani border.
In Washington, the dead and at least eight wounded were feared to be mostly Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) workers or intelligence contractors. The attack appeared to be by far the deadliest strike against the US intelligence community in the eight-year war in Afghanistan, The Washington Post reported on its website.
Media reports from Kabul said a suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest carried out the attack.
In another attack on foreigners in southern Afghanistan, four Canadian soldiers and a Canadian journalist were killed Wednesday in a roadside bombing in Kandahar province, the Canadian Defence Ministry said.
Four soldiers and another civilian were also injured in the blast on an armoured vehicle 4 km south of the provincial capital, also called Kandahar, the ministry said.
The US government was releasing little information about the Khost attack.
A spokesman at US Central Command in Tampa, Florida, the theatre unit of the US military responsible for its operations in Central Asia and the Middle East, confirmed there was an explosion at Forward Operating Base Chapman. None of those killed were military personnel, the spokesman said.
The base is reportedly used as an operations and surveillance centre.
“We mourn the loss of life in this attack and are withholding further details pending notification of next of kin,” Kelly said.
Four CIA officers are known to have died in Afghanistan since the 2001 US-led offensive to topple the then-ruling Taliban movement.
The Canadian government was also withholding the names of the soldiers killed in the Kandahar attack until their families were contacted, but the journalist’s newspaper, the Calgary Herald, identified her as Michelle Lang, 34.
Lang was embedded with Canadian troops in southern Afghanistan, reporting on their mission in the insurgency-plagued region, and was on patrol with a convoy when she died, it said.
She was the first Canadian journalist to die during the most recent Afghan conflict, the Herald said.
She had arrived on her first trip to Afghanistan in mid-December for what had been planned as a six-week stay after recently becoming engaged, it said.
According to icasualties.org, a website that tracks foreign troop casualties in Afghanistan and Iraq, 138 Canadian soldiers have now been killed in Afghanistan since their deployment there in 2002.
All foreign forces deaths there now total 1,567, the highest number of 949 coming from the United States, it said.
- Taliban attack two NATO bases in Afghanistan - Aug 28, 2010
- Five US soldiers killed in Afghan blasts (Lead) - Jul 24, 2010
- NATO says 20 insurgents killed in Afghanistan - Aug 14, 2010
- C.I.A. playing greater quasi-military role in Afghanistan and Pakistan: NYT - Jan 01, 2010
- Six NATO soldiers killed in Afghan attacks - Jul 10, 2010
- Obama hails CIA employees killed in Afghanistan as patriots - Jan 01, 2010
- Eight US soldiers among 25 killed in Afghanistan - Jul 14, 2010
- Iranian soldier captured in Afghanistan - Dec 24, 2010
- Ten troops killed in bloody day for ISAF in Afghanistan - Jun 08, 2010
- Pakistan may allow US military trainers: US media - Jan 21, 2012
- Six soldiers, 15 civilians killed in Afghanistan - Jul 31, 2010
- Canada loses its first journalist in Afghan war - Dec 31, 2009
- Three NATO soldiers among 11 killed in Afghanistan - May 04, 2010
- Taliban leader, five others killed in Afghanistan (Lead) - Feb 27, 2012
- ISI redefining terms of engagement with CIA before Davis immunity row settlement - Mar 06, 2011
Tags: armoured vehicle, canadian defence, canadian journalist, canadian soldiers, central intelligence agency, cia officers, cia workers, defence ministry, eastern afghanistan, kandahar province, khost, pakistani border, roadside bombing, southern afghanistan, state department spokesman, surveillance centre, us intelligence community, us military base, us state department, war in afghanistan