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US military were sitting targets

By Sarah Smith, Channel 4 News

Updated on 06 October 2009

The sad truth about the deaths of eight American soldiers in Afghanistan this weekend is that they were not even meant to be in the remote military base that was attacked, blogs Sarah Smith.

Soldiers carry an injured colleague (picture: Reuters)

They should have moved out months ago. Their commanders had been planning to pull out since December 2008 but various problems, from a lack of cargo helicopters to move their stuff to the extreme resistance of the Afghan government, slowed their exit.

Despite these setbacks many of them were due to leave this week if the Taliban had not fatally attacked first.

It was an all too predictable loss of life. Nick Paton Walsh could see that when he visited the Forward Operating Base Keating in Kamdesh in August (see acompanying report). He came under fire then from insurgents in the surrounding hillsides and it was obvious the US military there were sitting targets.


And in a rather eery coincidence anyone reading the Washington Post this weekend would have found out about a very similar attack just over a year ago only 20 miles away at Wanat.

Then nine American soldiers were killed and that death toll prompted the policy review which recommended pulling out of bases like Wanat and Kamdesh.

One of the solidiers who died in Wanat in 2008, First Lt. Jonathan Brostrom, was interviewed shortly before the fatal attack and said he believed the mission in Nuristan was "almost a lost cause".

After that bloody attack senior commanders comcluded they do not have enough forces to defeat the Taliban in these remote areas and recommended focssuing instead on defending major population centres rather than treacherous and barren mountain passes.

The only reason US troops were there was to try to stop insurgents crossing into Afghanistan from Pakistan and in that task they were almost totally failing anyway.

Now they have to work out how to get out of there without further casualties.

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