NATO report criticises German colonel in Afghan airstrikeNovember 6th, 2009 BRUSSELS - A NATO report on an airstrike in Afghanistan in September was critical of the German colonel who called for the attack, a high-ranking NATO officer has said. Colonel Georg Klein acted against orders and service regulations in calling for the strike and should not have done so, said the report released Thursday.
12 Afghan civilians killed after bus hits roadside bombSeptember 30th, 2009 12 Afghan civilians killed in roadside bomb blastKABUL — A roadside bomb blast in southern Afghanistan has killed 12 civilians. Police chief Bismullah Khan says a civilian bus hit a bomb in Kandahar province's Maiwand district Tuesday morning, killing the 12 civilians and wounding another 15.
Defense minister says 6 Italian soldiers killed, 4 injured in Afghan blastSeptember 17th, 2009 Italian defense minister: 6 dead in Afghan blastROME — The Italian defense minister says six Italian soldiers were killed in an attack in the Afghan capital, Kabul, and four others were injured. Ignazio La Russa says an explosive-filled car rammed into two vehicles carrying 10 Italian soldiers Thursday.
Afghan presidential panel says 30 civilians died in German-ordered US airstrikeSeptember 17th, 2009 Afghan panel says 30 civilians died in NATO strikeKABUL — An Afghan presidential commission said Thursday that 30 civilians and 69 armed Taliban militants died in a German-ordered U.S. airstrike on two hijacked fuel tankers earlier this month.
Afghan probe into NATO airstrike clears German ArmySeptember 11th, 2009 KABUL - The commission appointed by Afghan President Hamid Karzai to investigate last week's NATO airstrike on two fuel tankers that claimed dozens of Taliban and civilian lives has exonerated the German Army, which ordered the strike, a German television station reported Friday. Civilians were indeed among the victims, but responsibility for the incident lies with the Taliban, ARD television reported, citing investigators in the commission.
Germany's Merkel: no premature judgments on Afghan strike in which civilians reportedly diedSeptember 8th, 2009 Merkel: no premature judgments on Afghan airstrikeBERLIN — Chancellor Angela Merkel said Tuesday that the world should reserve judgment on whether civilians were killed in a German-ordered airstrike in Afghanistan, even as NATO said it believed that civilians had died. Merkel said her country would not accept premature judgments of its actions in the strike last week and delivered a robust defense of Germany's military mission in Afghanistan.
German chancellor calls for world to reserve judgment on civilian deaths in Afghan airstrikeSeptember 8th, 2009 German leader: No rushed judgment on Afghan strikeBERLIN — Chancellor Angela Merkel said Tuesday that the world should reserve judgment on whether civilians were killed in a German-ordered airstrike in Afghanistan, even as NATO said it believed that civilians had died in the attack. The NATO-led force announced that it believed after a preliminary review that civilians had been killed and wounded along with insurgents in the strike last week on two hijacked tanker trucks in the northern province of Kunduz.
Military says probe into NATO airstrike will take 'several weeks'September 8th, 2009 KABUL - The NATO military command said Tuesday its probe into a deadly airstrike in the northern Afghan province of Kunduz would take "several weeks" and an initial assessment showed "civilians had been killed or injured in the strike". Friday's airstrike conducted by US planes was ordered by a German military commander when a large crowd of people was observed through satellite images gathering around two trucks stuck in a riverbed in Chardarah district in Kunduz province.
Suicide bombing injures three German soldiers in AfghanistanSeptember 5th, 2009 KUNDUZ - Three German soldiers were injured in a suicide bombing Saturday in northern Afghanistan, a day after a German-ordered airstrike in which dozens of people were killed in the same province. The bomber blew himself up in an explosives-packed car, said Mohammad Omar, governor of Kunduz province.
Top NATO commander visits site of Afghan air strikeSeptember 5th, 2009 KUNDUZ - The top NATO commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, travelled to the northern province of Kunduz Saturday to visit the site of a deadly NATO airstrike, where villagers claimed that "scores" of civilians were killed. Teams from the Afghan government, NATO military and the UN are investigating the incident, in which trucks hijacked by the Taliban were hit in a US jet strike ordered by the local German command of the NATO-led force.
90 dead in Afghan explosion as Taliban distributes fuel (Second Lead)September 4th, 2009 KUNDUZ - Ninety people were killed Friday when two hijacked oil tankers exploded in the northern Afghan province of Kunduz as Taliban militants were distributing fuel to civilians, said provincial governor Mohammad Omar. The militants stopped the two oil trucks Thursday night on the highway connecting Kunduz with the neighbouring province of Baghlan, Omar said.
Gates calls Afghan civilian casualties one of the greatest strategic problems in the warJune 18th, 2009 Gates: Civilian deaths strategic problem in warWASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Robert Gates says the accidental killing of civilians in Afghanistan has become one of the military's greatest strategic problems in the faltering war. Gates says it will take another day or two before officials release their investigation into an early May battle and airstrikes in which dozens of Afghan civilians were killed.
NATO mortar rounds kill 2 Afghan civilians, wound 5 in eastJune 12th, 2009 NATO mortar rounds kill Afghan civiliansKABUL — NATO mortar rounds killed two Afghan civilians during a clash with insurgents in eastern Afghanistan, while a bomb blast killed a British soldier in the south, officials said Friday. The fighting in eastern Kunar province Thursday began when insurgents attacked NATO forces.
US commander says Taliban beheadings led to US air strikes that locals say killed civiliansMay 6th, 2009 US commander: Taliban beheading led to air strikesKABUL — Amid a U.S. apology for civilian deaths in Afghanistan, the commander of U.S.
Germany condemns Afghan suicide attackJanuary 16th, 2009 BERLIN - Germany's Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier condemned Saturday's suicide bombing near the German embassy in Kabul as 'barbaric act'. In a statement, the minister said: 'Germany remains committed to Afghanistan.