At least thirty-one US special forces have been
killed after a helicopter belonging to the NATO's
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)
crashed in Afghanistan's eastern province of
Wardak.
The deaths were announced in a statement by the
office of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, AFP
reported on Saturday.
The death toll is the biggest in a single incident for
foreign forces since the US-led invasion of
Afghanistan in 2001.
Seven Afghan forces were also killed in the
incident, the statement added.
Provincial spokesman Shahidullah Shahid said the
chopper crashed on Friday night in the city of
Seyed Abad.
The helicopter went down when it was carrying
out an anti-Taliban operation by foreign and Afghan
forces in which at least eight militants were killed,
the Afghan official said.
A spokesman for ISAF said they are investigating
the crash but did not provide any further
information about the incident.
Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said the
militant group was responsible for shooting down
the helicopter.
The Afghan official confirmed the militants' claim.
"The US chopper that crashed last night was shot
down by the Taliban as it was taking off. A rocket
fired by the militants hit it and completely
destroyed it," Shahid said.
Add a comment
Sunday, 07 Ramadan 1432
Sunday, 07 August 2011 06:05Add a comment
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|



