KABUL: Insurgents shot down a US helicopter after exchanging fire with its crew in central Afghanistan yesterday, while a suicide bomber in the north killed two American soldiers inside a police station, officials said.
The crew of the helicopter, forced down in a province neighboring Kabul, were rescued and troops were “in the process of recovering the aircraft,” said Lt. Cmdr. Walter Matthew, a US military spokesman.
“The helicopter crew exchanged fire with the enemy before the damage brought the helicopter down,” Matthews said.
At least four militants were killed in the exchange, said Fazel Karim Muslim, the chief of Sayed Abad district.
Wardak province has seen an increase in insurgent activity the last two years, and its main highway is now extremely risky to travel on, particularly at night. In mid-October, a US Special Forces raid freed a kidnapped American working for the Army Corps of Engineers who had been held by his captors in Wardak for two months.
The US and other foreign forces rely heavily on helicopters for transportation around Afghanistan, which is covered by rough mountains and long stretches of desert and has few decent roads. Insurgents rarely bring down military helicopters, though they have hit several in recent years.
Separately, a suicide bomber wearing a police uniform blew himself up inside a police station in northern Afghanistan yesterday, killing two American soldiers and wounding five other people, officials said.
The bomber entered a police station in Pul-e-Khumri, the capital of Baghlan province, while Afghan officials were meeting with US troops advising a police training program, provincial police chief Gen. Abdul Rahman Sayed Kheil said. The blast killed two American soldiers, a US military spokesman said.
Four Afghan security officers were wounded, Kheil said. It was not immediately clear if the bomber was a policeman or just wearing the police uniform. Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taleban spokesman, claimed responsibility for the blast. Mujahid said the bomber’s name was Abdul Had and that he was from Baghlan province.
Militants in Afghanistan have in the past disguised themselves in police or army uniforms when attacking Afghan and foreign troops. But actual policemen in the Afghan force were responsible for at least two recent attacks in eastern Afghanistan in which two US soldiers died after police opened fire on them in two separate incidents.
More US and NATO troops have died this year in Afghanistan than any other year since the 2001 US invasion, in part because Taleban militants are launching increasingly complex and deadly attacks.
Taleban militants abducted 17 Afghans working for a private road construction company in eastern Afghanistan at the weekend and are still holding 14, the interior ministry said yesterday.
The rebels attacked the local office of the Afghan company in the northeastern province of Kunar early Sunday and rounded up the workers, the ministry said in a statement.
“Three of the abducted were freed hours later but there is no news on the fate of the 14 others,” it said.