Afghanistan attacks kill 2 soldiers, civilians

By Jason Straziuso

Associated Press

Published: Sunday, Jan. 18 2009 12:00 a.m. MST

The destroyed vehicle, thought to be a Toyota Corolla, used by a suicide bomber sits on the road after the blast in Chaparhar district of Ningarhar province, east of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Saturday.

Rahmat Gul, Associated Press

Enlarge photo»

KABUL, Afghanistan — A suicide car bomb attack Saturday on a heavily guarded road between a U.S. military base and the German Embassy in the Afghan capital killed one U.S. service member and four Afghan civilians, officials said.

Separately, a U.S. service member died when militants fired at a CH-47 transport helicopter and it made a "hard landing" in eastern Kunar province, the U.S. military said. Military spokesman Col. Greg Julian said it wasn't immediately clear whether the incoming fire brought down the helicopter.

The attacks come at a time of increasing attention on Afghanistan as President-elect Barack Obama is set to take office. Obama has promised to increase America's focus on the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan while decreasing troop levels in Iraq.

The U.S. has said it will send up to 30,000 new troops into Afghanistan in 2009, including some 3,000 forces in two provinces adjacent to Kabul, where militants now have free reign. The U.S. now has some 32,000 troops in Afghanistan.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the bomb attack in Kabul and said German military personnel were the targets. A spokesman for the German Foreign Ministry in Berlin said "some personnel" were wounded in the blast, but he did not give numbers. He said they had no reports of deaths.

U.S. military spokesman Col. Jerry O'Hara said one U.S. service member died from wounds received in the 9:45 a.m. attack on a busy Kabul street. The blast also wounded six American troops and a U.S. civilian, he said.

"They detonated this explosive device right in a crowded area that was both used by civilians and military people," O'Hara said.

Four Afghan civilians died in the blast, and at least 19 wounded were being treated at two hospitals, the interior minister said. Two other wounded civilians were at other hospitals, said Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi, the Defense Ministry spokesman.

The German Embassy shares a small, two-lane road with Camp Eggers, a U.S. base that serves as the headquarters for soldiers who train Afghan police and army personnel. Dozens of armed Afghan security personnel guard the street, and blast walls of concrete and sand-filled mesh-wire boxes line the road.

"It did not breach the wall (of the base)," said U.S. military spokesman Lt. Col. Chris Kubik. "It was fairly close but I can't tell you if they were targeting us or not."

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