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Two Italian soldiers killed in Afghanistan bomb attack

Unauthorised Austrian arms seized in Afghanistan
NATO-led forces have seized Austrian-made weapons from insurgents in Afghanistan despite the fact they require an export licence, WikiLeaks documents published by the Standard daily said Wednesday. The arms in question are 82-millimetre mortars and hand grenades captured from Taliban fighters between April 2005 and March 2009, the Austrian newspaper's website said. The Austrian interior ministry, which is responsible for issuing arms export licences, told the paper it had no trace of any authorisation to export such arms and munitions to Afghanistan over the last 20 years. The Austrian correspondent for Jane's Defence Weekly suggested to the paper that the weapons may have been exported to Pakistan and taken from there to neighbouring Afghanistan. Hirtenberger Defence Systems is the only Austrian business to have requested permission to export mortars, the ministry told the left-leaning paper, as it is the only company in the Alpine republic to manufacture the weapons. The company declined to comment when contacted by the Standard.
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) July 28, 2010
Two Italian soldiers were killed in a bomb attack Wednesday in the west of Afghanistan, the NATO-led force said.

The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement the two were killed by an improvised explosive device, the Taliban's weapon of choice, but did not give the location of the attack.

"I can confirm they were Italian soldiers," an ISAF spokesman told AFP.

In Rome, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said the two were bomb disposal experts and a Defence Ministry statement said they had defused an improvised explosive device but were killed in an explosion caused by another one.

In May two Italian soldiers with the 327th Engineer Regiment from Turin were killed when their convoy was hit by a bomb near Herat, the main city in the west of Afghanistan.

Italy has 3,300 troops in Afghanistan with ISAF and heads the western regional command based in Herat. With the latest deaths 26 Italian soldiers or diplomats have died in Afghanistan since 2004 in attacks, accidents or of natural causes.

A total of 404 foreign troops have been killed in military operations in Afghanistan since the start of this year, according to an AFP tally based on that kept by the icasualties.org website.

Eighty-two soldiers have died so far in July, compared with 102 in June, which was the worst month for foreign military casualties since the end of 2001.

The Taliban-led insurgency has gained intensity in the past four years and spread its attacks to most of the country despite the deployment of tens of thousands more foreign troops, in particular American forces.

Easy to make and plant, IEDs are the main killer of foreign and Afghan troops, and of Afghan civilians.

related report
NATO reports soldier killed in Taliban attack in Afghanistan
NATO reported that a foreign soldier was killed in an insurgent attack in southern Afghanistan, bringing the toll among its forces to 402 for the year, according to an AFP count.

NATO's international Security Assistance Force (ISAF) did not reveal the circumstances of the death, or the nationality of the soldier. It said that the incident took place on Tuesday.

Southern Afghanistan is the most volatile region of the Taliban-led insurgency, which is nearing the end of its ninth year.

Deaths of foreign soldiers have spiked in recent months as deployment of US and NATO troops nears its peak of 150,000, taking the fight to the Taliban in a counter-insurgency strategy aimed at speeding the end of the war.



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Washington (AFP) July 28, 2010
US lawmakers on Tuesday easily approved urgent funding for President Barack Obama's escalation in Afghanistan, despite a huge leak of secret military files that stoked anger at the unpopular war. The 308-114 vote in the House of Representatives set the stage for Obama to sign the legislation, which provides some 37 billion dollars to fund the conflict in Iraq and pay for his "surge" of 33,00 ... read more







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