Suicide bomber Attack U.S. Soldiers Convoy in Afghanistan

by Tanweer | January 17, 2009 at 07:02 am
857 views | 6 Recommendations | 1 comment

Today two attempts of resistance over the U.S Soldiers has been covered by International media. one of the attempts of resistance over the U.S soldiers Convoy has been took place in Chaparhar district of Nangarhar province, east of Kabul Afghanistan. there is no news has been reported regarding the casualities. The second attempt was over U.S base in Capital Kabul. It was a huge blast the U.S soldiers has too many casualities. The Afghan official said it is earlier to say that it is a suicide attack it need to investigate before saying anything. 

Photos

Suicide bomb kills U.S. service member in Kabul-Photo-05

Suicide bomb kills U.S. service member in Kabul-Photo-05

see larger image

uploaded by Tanweer

One of the aims of invaders in Afghanistan it was security  and today once again the question impose is the NATO and American are able atleast to take security of them self? still no one can give answer.

KABUL (Reuters) - A suicide car bomb killed a U.S. service member, four Afghan civilians and wounded 19 others in an attack outside a U.S. military base and the German embassy in the Afghan capital on Saturday, officials and witnesses said.

A sewage tanker and several cars were burning at the scene and there were blood stains on the road as police loaded bodies and wounded onto the back of pick-up trucks and ambulances ferried wounded to nearby hospitals, a Reuters witness said.

One U.S. service member died, while six U.S. service members and a U.S. civilian were wounded, a U.S. forces statement said.

Advertisement
recommend Sign In or Join to post comments
0
Tanweer

Your Welcome, no they are not my images.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

Heritage
First Flagged at 7:16 AM, Jan 17, 2009 by Heritage
These members have powered this story:

Related Stories

Recommendations (6)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from