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American aircraft 'kill' British troops

 
 
Reply Fri 24 Aug, 2007 01:46 pm
It is a good job that the Brits are pulling out of Iraq at least , if the Iraqis dont get em .......

http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanistan/story/0,,2155628,00.html

'US friendly fire' kills British soldiers in Afghanistan


Mark Tran
Friday August 24, 2007
Guardian Unlimited


British soldiers on patrol in the Helmand province in southern Afghanistan. Photograph: John D McHugh/AFP



Three British soldiers have been killed in an apparent friendly fire incident involving US aircraft in southern Afghanistan, the Ministry of Defence said today.
Two other soldiers were injured in the incident, which occurred yesterday at 6.30pm local time (3pm BST).

The MoD said the soldiers, from 1st Battalion the Royal Anglian Regiment, were taking part in a patrol to disrupt Taliban activity in north-west Kajaki, in Helmand province.

The patrol was attacked by Taliban insurgents and air support was summoned in the form of two US F15 aircraft. One bomb was dropped, apparently killing the three soldiers. They were declared dead at the scene.

The two injured soldiers were evacuated by helicopter to a medical facility at Camp Bastion for treatment.

The defence secretary, Des Browne, promised a thorough investigation and defended the use of air support for British troops.

"I do not want us to get into a situation where we're blaming each other when, as a matter of fact, US air support has saved our people's lives on many, many occasions, particularly over the last four months in that very theatre," he said.

The US embassy in London said in a statement: "The United States expresses its deep condolences to the families and loved ones of the soldiers who died, and we wish those who were injured a speedy recovery."

The soldiers' next of kin have requested a 24-hour period before further details are released.

The casualties brought to 73 the total number of deaths of British forces in Afghanistan since operations began in November 2001.

Of these, 50 were killed in action. The other 23 died from illness, accidents or injuries not from combat.

The Royal Anglian Regiment had lost six of its members in the past four months before the latest incident. The last person to die from the Royal Anglians, Captain David Hicks, was killed on August 11 during an attack by the Taliban on his patrol base north-east of Sangin, in Helmand.

Earlier this year Mr Browne said 12 British soldiers had died in friendly fire incidents involving US forces since 1990, but that no such incidents had taken place in Afghanistan.

Britain has about 7,000 troops in Afghanistan, mostly around Helmand province in the south of the country, where fighting has been particularly heavy.

Violence in Afghanistan is running at its highest level since US forces invaded the country in 2001. Taliban and other militants, some with links to al-Qaida, carry out near-daily suicide attacks, roadside bombings and ambushes - especially in the east and south of the country as they attempt to destabilise the western-backed government in Kabul.

In other developments, US-led troops shot dead a suspected militant and detained 11 others in a raid in eastern Afghanistan.

The man was killed while "attempting to engage coalition and Afghan forces" during a raid in Nangarhar province, the statement said. The detained eleven will be questioned "as to their involvement in militant activities", it said.
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Mame
 
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Reply Fri 24 Aug, 2007 09:57 pm
Unfortunately, there's always friendly fire. It's part of the hazards of the job, sad to say.
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Endymion
 
  1  
Reply Wed 29 Aug, 2007 06:07 am
Fratricide happens - too true

(Although some have a worse record than others)

I think the difficulty here with the Brits is that the US still refuse to allow American troops to give evidence in the UK - regarding any of the British service men killed by US fire (despite assurances that they would not be on trial).

Where as the British are happy to travel to the States to give evidence.

Sometimes it isn't what you do, so much as how you do it - and the complete disregard for the families of these dead service men is hard to swallow. Over here it smacks of arrogance. We are called to give evidence in the States when a family want to know how a son's life ended - and that's how it should be. Are the relatives of our dead soldiers any less human? No.
But for some reason, their feelings count for nothing.

British soldiers signed up to defend their Queen and Country - not to defend aggressive US Foreign policy - and the families of those who die in this mess can only be further devastated by US refusal to even consider helping them piece together the event that lead to their son/husband/father being killed by a blue-on-blue.

This policy of the US can only ratify the growing claims here in Britain that we are being used by the United States -
You'd think they'd show a bit more cunning in whose considerations they dismiss as 'unimportant.'

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6967982.stm

"While coroners may continue to ask for US witnesses to attend... they should be aware that there will in all cases be a refusal."
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