The number of foreign troops killed in Afghanistan this year has reached at least 500, compared with 521 in all of 2009, according to an independent monitoring site on September 6. There has been a sharp increase in foreign military deaths, many of them American, as foreign troops launch more operations to counter a growing Taleban-led insurgency that has spread out of traditional strongholds in the south and east. Violence across Afghanistan has hit its worst since the Taleban were ousted by US-backed Afghan forces in late 2001. Military and civilian casualties are at record levels, with US and NATO commanders warning of tougher fighting ahead. The spiralling death tolls come despite the presence of almost 150,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan and will be another worrying statistic when US President Barack Obama conducts a strategy review of the war in December. Public support for the war is flagging, with a recent opinion poll by NBC television and the Wall Street Journal showing as many as seven in 10 Americans saying they did not believe the war would end successfully. The traditional summer fighting period has taken a heavy toll on foreign troops this year. A total of 102 were killed in June, the deadliest month of the war, followed by 88 in July and another 80 in August, according to independent monitor www.iCasualties.org. The latest casualties take to 2,068 the number killed since 2001, almost half of them in 2009 and 2010. Roughly 60 per cent of those killed were Americans.
AFGHAN FOREIGN TROOPS DEATH TOLL HITS 500
The number of foreign troops killed in Afghanistan this year has reached at least 500, compared with 521 in all of 2009, according to an independent monitoring site on September 6.
