Afghanistan: U.S. Fatalities
Afghan war pictures Current News and Newspapers from Afghanistan | a 7-minute video of an attack by an AC-130U Spectre gunship upon an Afghan village in October 2001. The video depicts U.S gunners firing directly upon people leaving the mosque, Click to see from :http://pubpages.unh.edu/~mwherold/AC130_Gunship.wmv | | There have been 188 coalition deaths -- 153 Americans, one Australian, four Britons, seven Canadians, three Danes, two French, 14 Germans, one Italian, one Norwegian and two Romanians -- in the war on terror as of December 8, 2004. Another source claims to be close to 1000, From October 21, 2001, Jihad Unspun staff and researchers began tracking military casualties in the US war on “terrorism” campaign in Afghanistan from approximately 40 international news sources daily |
The Islamic State of Afghanistan is a landlocked country in Central Asia. It is bordered by Iran in the west, Pakistan in the south and east, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan in the north, and China in the easternmost part of the country. Until the nation has its first general election (projected for June 4, 2003), it continues to be referred to by the West as the Transitional Islamic State of Afghanistan. On March 27, 2003, Afghan deputy defense minister general Abdul Rashid Dostum created an office for the North Zone of Afghanistan and appointed officials to it, defying interim president Hamid Karzai's orders that there be no zones in Afghanistan MORE>>>>>>> | Who is Hamid Karzai? Coalition casualty and injury counts in Afghanistan have, so far, been extremely difficult to obtain Casualties in Afghanistan "How many civilians have been killed in Afghanistan since the start of U.S.-led bombing on October 7? Journalists and aid workers have limited access to the area, so it’s an admittedly difficult question to answer. But many U.S. media outlets don’t seem to be trying very hard" FAIR US Afghanistan Casualties - Will We Ever Know The Truth By Andrei Sukhozhilov Afghanistan's Environmental Casualties overshadowed by the human suffering caused by decades of war, afghanistan's environment is also in crisis. "A Dossier on Civilian Victims of United States' Aerial Bombing of Afghanistan: A Comprehensive Accounting" and "A Day-to-Day Chronicle of Afghanistan's Guerrilla and Civil War, June 2003 - Present" Marc Herold, Ph.D Web links on Afghanistan war Links to various news and web sites
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