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Friday, May 28 2010 - 08:13 AM
1,000 DEAD!!!
I just found this article, and this is really the only “blog” that I participate in, so if I can just ask everyone for a prayer to give our soldiers strength and wisdom as they go to battle.

BRING ’EM HOME!!!

By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – The U.S. military suffered its 1,000th death of the Afghan war Friday, according to an Associated Press count, when NATO reported a service member was killed by a roadside bomb in southern Afghanistan.

A NATO statement did not identify the victim’s name or nationality, but U.S. spokesman Col. Wayne Shanks said the service member was American.

The Associated Press bases its tally on U.S. Defense Department reports of deaths suffered as a direct result of the Afghan conflict, including personnel assigned to units in Afghanistan, Pakistan or Uzbekistan.

Other news organizations count deaths suffered by service members assigned elsewhere as part of Operation Enduring Freedom, which includes operations in the Philippines, the Horn of Africa and at the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The NATO statement gave no details of the bombing Friday, nor did it specify where the attack occurred. U.S., NATO and Afghan forces are gearing up for a major operation in the south in a bid to shore up government control of Kandahar, the biggest city in southern Afghanistan and the Taliban’s former headquarters.

The list of American service members killed in combat in Afghanistan begins with Sgt. 1st Class Nathan Ross Chapman of San Antonio, Texas. The 31-year-old career Special forces soldier was ambushed on Jan. 4, 2002, after attending a meeting with Afghan leaders in Khost province. He left a wife and two children. The base where a suicide bomber killed seven CIA employees in December bears his name.

The latest death was reported just ahead of the Memorial Day weekend in the United States when Americans honor their dead in all the nation’s wars.

Elsewhere, Afghan officials said they still had no confirmation of reports that a Pakistani Taliban leader who spearheaded the takeover of Pakistan’s Swat Valley three years ago was killed this week in a fierce battle with Afghan forces in remote eastern Afghanistan.

Hundreds of militants have been trying since Sunday to seize control of the Barg-e-Matal district of Nuristan province along the Pakistani border and fighting continued in the area Friday, provincial officials said.

Villagers who took part in the fighting reported that they had killed the Taliban commander, Maulana Fazlullah, along with six of his fighters during a strong insurgent attack Wednesday, according to Gen. Mohammad Zaman Mamozai, commander for Afghan border police in eastern Afghanistan.

Nuristan police Chief Mohammad Qasim said authorities were unable to confirm the death of Fazlullah, who gained prominence in 2007 as the “Radio Mullah” for his vehemently anti-Western sermons on local radio stations in the Swat Valley. The former mountain resort area fell under Taliban control until Pakistani forces drove them out last year.

In Pakistan, Maulana Faqir Mohammed, the Taliban chief in the Bajur area, told The Associated Press by phone that Fazlullah had gone to Nuristan with his fighters.

“We are trying to contact him,” he said. “We believe that he is safe and he has not been killed.”

Another Taliban commander in Bajur, Asad Ullah, insisted that Fazlullah was alive.

“Maulana Fazlullah was the guest of Taliban in Nuristan, and we don’t think he can be killed so easily,” he said.

The Afghan Interior Ministry said one police officer had also been killed in the Nuristan fighting. Officials said about 500 Pakistani Taliban were involved in the siege.

The insurgents first attacked the district government building on Sunday. Provincial police chief Gen. Mohammad Qasim Jangulbagh said local residents joined the fight against the Taliban because they heard Fazlullah had issued a fatwa, or religious command, to kill those who supported the government.

Nuristan is a rugged, mountainous province whose people have a reputation for fierce resistance to outsiders

05/28/10 - 08:20 AM
American says...
Anyone interested in putting something together to send to our troops in Kandahar. My brother is there, and he is asking for socks and underwear. I guess it is getting rough out there so, if anybody is interested, please let me know. It supposedly takes a month to get stuff there, so if there is anybody interested, let me know, and I’ll post back with any updates I get. I sent a package for him with some tobacco and socks, but I’m sure there are more soldiers there that would appreciate some support, so I assume anything you would like to send would be appreciated, just no chocolate or anything like that which will melt.
Who Knows? Maybe we can make a small bright spot in their day.
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05/28/10 - 04:30 PM
marino says...
Socks and underwear. What else? Toothpaste? Gum? Get a list from him/them.

You can get plenty of stuff they’d need from the dollar store also.

Let me know asap.
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05/29/10 - 12:13 AM
sikntired says...
American,first let me say I hope your brother is safe and returns home to you;you might contact Blue Star Mothers and see what advice they can give about sending things there
http://www.avbluestarmothers.com/
Please thank your brother for his service to us,and let us know how we can be of help.
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