British death toll in Afghanistan exceeds Iraq total
July 11th, 2009 - 5:29 am ICT by IANS
Kabul/London, July 11 (DPA) The British death toll in Afghanistan Friday surpassed the level of military fatalities suffered in the Iraq war, as five more soldiers died in roadside explosions, officials said.
The deaths took the toll in Afghanistan to 184, compared to the 179 soldiers killed during the entire Iraq conflict between March, 2003 and April this year.
The defence ministry said the five soldiers were on foot patrol near Sangin in Helmand province when they were hit by two separate explosions of improvised roadside bombs.
Earlier Friday, the ministry confirmed the death of one British soldier, following the loss of two servicemen Thursday - one in an explosion and another in a clash with militants.
US-led coalition forces killed several suspected militants and arrested others in east-central Afghanistan, the British and US militaries said Friday.
The rising daily death toll has rekindled the debate in Britain about its involvement in Afghanistan.
But, speaking at the Group of Eight (G8) summit in Italy, Prime Minister Gordon Brown ruled out a change of strategy.
“This is a very hard summer, it’s not over but it’s vital that the international community sees through its commitment to Afghanistan,” said Brown.
“Our resolution to complete the work that we have started in Afghanistan and Pakistan is undiminished. We knew from the start that defeating the insurgency in Helmand would be a hard and dangerous job but it is vital.”
Britain has increased its presence in Afghanistan by several hundred to around 8,300 for an interim period up to the elections in Afghanistan next month.
But the fierce clashes and rising death toll that have accompanied the current US-led offensive in Helmand have prompted criticism from opposition leaders and senior former soldiers.
The top US commander in the Middle East, General David Petraeus, has described the battle in southern Afghanistan as “the longest campaign”.
Meanwhile, General Charles Guthrie, a former head of the British Armed Forces, Friday accused the government of putting British forces at risk and spending the “minimum they could get away with” on defence.
Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth acknowledged this week that there was “gloom and worry” about the British fatalities and admitted more lives would be lost.
“I do believe that we are making progress and I do believe that this is winnable, but it is not winnable in the short term,” he said.
News of the deaths came as the bodies of five other British soldiers killed in Afghanistan were flown back to RAF Lyneham, an air force base in the southwestern county of Wiltshire.
Relatives and hundreds of residents took part in a moving repatriation ceremony in the nearby town of Wootton Bassett Friday.
Meanwhile, Afghan and coalition troops captured six suspected militants, including two commanders of the Pakistan-based Haqqani network, a militant group associated with the Taliban, in two raids Thursday night in Khost province, the US military said in a statement.
It said one of the commanders was involved in smuggling suicide attackers, foreign fighters and weapons into neighbouring Afghanistan.
The raids took place at two compounds 10 kilometres southwest of Khost city after intelligence indicated militant activity at those locations, the statement said.
In Ghazni province, several militants were killed Thursday night after they opened fire on troops arriving to raid a compound in the Giro district, another US statement said. Some militants who fled the raid were also killed.
The statement did not detail exactly how many people were killed in the firefight, but four suspected extremists were detained in the raid.
Soldiers uncovered a weapons cache, including rocket-propelled grenade launchers and grenades, bomb-making equipment, one complete bomb and ammunition.
The US military said the aim of the operation was to disrupt the Taliban’s operational and logistical support network for ambushes.
According to the statement, “The Haqqani network remains one of the most lethal Taliban organisations operating out of Pakistan’s federally administered tribal area.”
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Tags: british soldier, central afghanistan, change of strategy, dangerous job, david petraeus, death toll, defence ministry, elections in afghanistan, fierce clashes, foot patrol, general david petraeus, gordon brown, interim period, iraq conflict, iraq war, opposition leaders, prime minister gordon brown, roadside bombs, sangin, southern afghanistan