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At least 14 Americans have been killed in a series of air crashes in Afghanistan, military officials say.
In the first incident, four US soldiers died and two were hurt when two helicopters collided mid-air in the south, Nato-led forces said.
In a separate incident seven soldiers and three civilians were killed in a helicopter crash in the west.
Hostile fire was ruled out as a cause of the collision but no cause has yet been identified for the crash.
Twelve Americans and 14 Afghans were injured in that incident.
This year has seen the highest death toll of international troops in Afghanistan since the Taliban were overthrown in 2001.
There have been dozens of American soldiers among those killed.
Source: BBC NEWS | South Asia | Afghan crashes kill 14 Americans
14 Americans dead in copter collisions in Afghanistan
October 26, 2009 5:27 a.m. EDT
Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- Fourteen Americans died in a pair of helicopter crashes in Afghanistan on Monday, NATO's International Security Assistance Force said.
In the deadlier crash, a helicopter went down in the country's west.
"Seven U.S. service members and three U.S. civilians were killed," an ISAF statement said. "Those injured include 14 Afghan service members, 11 U.S. service members and one U.S. civilian."
Enemy action was not suspected in the crash, the military said.
Four other U.S. service members were killed when two helicopters apparently crashed mid-air in southern Afghanistan. Two other NATO-led service members were injured.
"The incident is currently being investigated, but it is confirmed that hostile fire was not involved," ISAF said in an earlier news release.
Separately, ISAF said a joint international security force killed more than a dozen enemy fighters while searching a compound. The site was thought to harbor insurgents tied to narcotics trafficking in western Afghanistan.
The militants were killed in a firefight when insurgents confronted the joint force. As the force was leaving, a helicopter "went down due to unconfirmed reasons," ISAF said.
A recovery operation was launched.
Source: http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/10/26/afghanistan.chopper.crashes/index.html
In the first incident, four US soldiers died and two were hurt when two helicopters collided mid-air in the south, Nato-led forces said.
In a separate incident seven soldiers and three civilians were killed in a helicopter crash in the west.
Hostile fire was ruled out as a cause of the collision but no cause has yet been identified for the crash.
Twelve Americans and 14 Afghans were injured in that incident.
This year has seen the highest death toll of international troops in Afghanistan since the Taliban were overthrown in 2001.
There have been dozens of American soldiers among those killed.
Source: BBC NEWS | South Asia | Afghan crashes kill 14 Americans
14 Americans dead in copter collisions in Afghanistan
October 26, 2009 5:27 a.m. EDT
Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- Fourteen Americans died in a pair of helicopter crashes in Afghanistan on Monday, NATO's International Security Assistance Force said.
In the deadlier crash, a helicopter went down in the country's west.
"Seven U.S. service members and three U.S. civilians were killed," an ISAF statement said. "Those injured include 14 Afghan service members, 11 U.S. service members and one U.S. civilian."
Enemy action was not suspected in the crash, the military said.
Four other U.S. service members were killed when two helicopters apparently crashed mid-air in southern Afghanistan. Two other NATO-led service members were injured.
"The incident is currently being investigated, but it is confirmed that hostile fire was not involved," ISAF said in an earlier news release.
Separately, ISAF said a joint international security force killed more than a dozen enemy fighters while searching a compound. The site was thought to harbor insurgents tied to narcotics trafficking in western Afghanistan.
The militants were killed in a firefight when insurgents confronted the joint force. As the force was leaving, a helicopter "went down due to unconfirmed reasons," ISAF said.
A recovery operation was launched.
Source: http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/10/26/afghanistan.chopper.crashes/index.html