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THE STANS
Obama praises US troops as Afghanistan mission winds down
by Staff Writers
Kaneohe, United States (AFP) Dec 26, 2014


Afghan officials say NATO air strike kills five civilians
Logar, Afghanistan (AFP) Dec 26, 2014 - Afghan officials said that a NATO air strike on Friday killed five civilians and wounded six others, just days before the US-led military coalition ends combat operations in the country.

NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) did not immediately confirm the strike on Logar province, south of the capital Kabul, but always stresses that it tries to avoid civilian casualties.

"At around 3:30 am, US forces conducted an air strike in Aab Josh village of Baraki Barak district," said the district governor Mohammad Amin.

"The air strike hit a residential house killing five and wounding six civilians," he told AFP.

Niaz Mohammad Amiri, Logar province's acting governor, said the incident happened as US forces tracked Taliban fighters that have been waging a deadly insurgency since late 2001.

"US forces were chasing down Taliban militants, but mistakenly bombarded a house. As a result, civilians were victims of the attack," Amiri said.

Civilian deaths in air strikes have been one of the most emotive and high-profile issues of the 13-year Afghan war, however, UN statistics show that the Taliban are responsible for the majority of deaths.

A UN report last week, said that civilian casualties jumped 19 percent by the end of November compared to the year before.

Some 3,188 civilians were killed and 6,429 injured, with the Taliban accountable for 75 percent of all cases.

NATO ends its 13-year mission against the Taliban in Afghanistan on Wednesday.

A follow-up mission of about 12,500 US-led NATO troops will stay on to train and support Afghan security forces.

President Barack Obama in a Christmas Day speech to US troops stationed in Hawaii hailed their "extraordinary dedication and sacrifices," as NATO prepares to wrap up its combat mission in Afghanistan.

After a morning of exchanging gifts with family members during their annual year-end vacation in his birth state, the president and First Lady Michelle Obama paid a visit late Thursday to a Marine Corps base in Hawaii.

As service members and their families tucked into a dinner of lobster, turkey, green beans, yams and other traditional Christmas Day fare, the president took the microphone to thank them for "extraordinary service" that he said has allowed the United States to hand responsibility for security to Afghan forces.

"We've been in continuous war now for over 13 years. Next week we will be ending our combat mission in Afghanistan," Obama told the crowd, to cheers and applause.

"Because of the extraordinary service of the men and women in the armed forces, Afghanistan has a chance to rebuild its own country. We are safer. It's not going to be a source of terrorist attacks again," he said.

NATO's combat mission ends on December 31, although some troops will remain to support the Afghan army and police who have taken on responsibility for suppressing worsening Islamist violence nationwide.

Flags were lowered at Kabul airport earlier this month as the US-led NATO force in Afghanistan marked the closure of its combat command center.

There are concerns however about Afghanistan's ability to maintain security as the Afghan Taliban steps up attacks.

A follow-up mission of about 12,500 US-led NATO troops will stay on to train and support Afghan security forces.

Even as the main military mission in Afghanistan winds down, "we still have some very difficult missions around the world, including in Iraq," the president told the marines.

The US military will still play a key role stanching crises around the world, he said.

"We still have folks in Afghanistan helping the Afghan security forces. We have people helping to deal with Ebola in Africa and obviously we have folks stationed all around the world," said Obama.

"But the world is better, it's safer, it's more peaceful, it's more prosperous and our homeland is protected because of you and the sacrifices each and every day," he told the troops, praising "the extraordinary dedication and sacrifices you all make."


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