Afghans allege NATO airstrike kills 7 civilians

A U.S. army soldier, center, takes his position at the site of a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, Oct. 13, 2014. An Afghan official said a suicide bomber targeting a NATO convoy in Kabul killed one civilian and wounded three others. (AP Photo/Massoud Hossaini)

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) A mountain ambush by Taliban fighters killed at least 14 Afghan security force troops, authorities said Monday, as villagers elsewhere in the country alleged a NATO airstrike that the coalition said targeted militants actually killed civilians.

The fighting in Sari Pul province, as well as the disputed NATO airstrike in eastern Paktia province, show the serious challenges facing new Afghan President Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai. Former President Hamid Karzai repeatedly clashed with NATO forces over civilian casualties from airstrikes, straining relations as public anger against the coalition grew.

The ambush in Sari Pul, where Taliban fighters reportedly have been massing for days, happened Sunday in its Kohistanat district. There, militants opened fire on an Afghan Army unit heading back to the capital after several months being deployed there, killing 12 soldiers and two police officers, said Kazim Kenhan, a spokesman for the provincial police chief.

Kenhan said 13 troops and four police officers were wounded and six troops are missing after the ambush there, some 340 kilometers (210 miles) northwest of the capital, Kabul.

"A very intensive gun battle is going on right now and the casualty number might change overnight," Kenhan said Monday. "It is a mountainous area and very difficult to reach. We do need air support as we requested from the international forces, but they didn't help us."

In Paktia province, hundreds of villagers protested over their allegation that a NATO airstrike killed seven civilians in an operation NATO said killed "eight armed enemy combatants."

The protesters brought seven corpses to the governor's office there, claiming they were civilians killed Sunday during a NATO airstrike in a mountainous area on the outskirts of the city of Gardez. The villagers said the strike targeted eight people collecting firewood and left one man wounded.

"From the evidence it seems that all seven who have been killed in the airstrike of the coalition forces are civilians, but this needs to be investigated more to find out why and how this incident has happened," said Abdul Wali Sahee, deputy provincial governor of Paktia province.

Sahee said that there was a dead body of a 12-year-old boy among those brought to the provincial capital.

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Afghans allege NATO airstrike kills 7 civilians

NATO convoy hit by suicide bomber in Afghanistan

A suicide bomber has targeted a NATO convoy in Afghanistan's capital Kabul, killing an Afghan civilian but causing no casualties among foreign troops, officials say.

The explosion struck around dawn (local time) in Kabul's east, on the road to the city of Jalalabad, Afghan authorities said.

"A suicide bomber blew up his vehicle loaded with explosives in Qabil Bai," deputy interior minister General Mohammad Ayub Salangi said in a tweet, adding that "one person was killed and three injured in this attack".

A spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force said there were "no ISAF casualties" in the attack.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for the bombing, but it had all the hallmarks of those carried out by the Taliban.

The group's last attack on NATO forces in Kabul was on September 16, also when a bomber rammed an explosives-laden car into a NATO convoy, triggering a massive blast that killed two US troops and one Polish soldier, and wounded a dozen civilians.

Kabul was also rocked two weeks ago by a series of suicide attacks staged during the inauguration of new president Ashraf Ghani.

More than a dozen people were killed in several attacks on Afghan security forces.

About 40,000 NATO troops are serving in Afghanistan, but their combat mission is scheduled to finish at the end of this year, and the Taliban's recent offensives have severely tested Afghan soldiers and police.

NATO's follow-up mission, which will take over on January 1, will be made up of 9800 US troops and about 3000 soldiers from Germany, Italy and other member countries.

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NATO convoy hit by suicide bomber in Afghanistan

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Latvia and U.S. Play War Games as Tensions with Russia Grow

TIME World latvia Latvia and U.S. Play War Games as Tensions with Russia Grow Soldiers from the Latvian army participate in the Silver Arrow NATO military exercise in Adazi, Latvia, Oct. 5, 2014. Ints KalninsReuters NATO members are beefing up their forces in eastern Europe, as Russia dials up its propaganda warfare and military intimidation

Over the sandbanks and marshes of northern Latvia, battle cries rang out late last month as U.S. and Latvian troops stormed a mock-up urban street, a training exercise one officer described as a Stalingrad-type scenario for soldiers more used to peace-keeping or fighting rural insurgents. After an 80,000 anti-tank missile and a volley of mortar and artillery fire launch the drills, a U.S. Black Hawk transports Latvian soldiers into the war games scenario, where they go house-to-house searching for a high-value target.

Not far away in the Latvian capital of Riga, officials were getting to work in the newly-inaugurated NATO Strategic Communications Center of Excellence, a hub aimed at countering information warfare by enemies of the 28-member military alliance.

The endeavors are at opposite ends of the tactical spectrum, but reflect the challenges presented by the new hybrid warfare which analysts say is the Kremlins modus operandi under President Vladimir Putin. While Russian troops openly went into Crimea this year to annex it from Ukraine, some of Russias neighbors are grappling with more subtle meddling and mind games.

NATO must be flexible, Latvian Defense Minister Raimonds Vejonis tells TIME, citing economic coercion, propaganda warfare and military intimidation along Russias Baltic borders as some of the new threats to emerge in the past year.

During the last 65 years after the Second World War it was calm and silent in Europe now the situation has changed this year due to Russian activities in Ukraine. We must be ready to adapt to the new situation, and ready to react to new geopolitical challenges in Europe.

NATO members are beefing up their forces in eastern Europe as a result. Earlier this year 600 U.S. troops from the 173rd Airborne Brigade deployed to Poland, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia and this week, U.S. tanks returned to Latvian soil for the first time since the Second World War. Joint military exercises have increased in size and frequency. At a NATO summit last month, leaders pledged increased funding for cyber and information warfare units, while also announcing the formation of a Rapid Reaction Force which could deploy to allied nations within days.

Analysts say this is a good start, but there is concern that NATO needs to send a stronger signal that any Russian military intervention not just a overt invasion would provoke Article Five, by which an attack on one member demands reaction from all 28.

This is time for NATO to be crystal clear, says Matthew Bryza, a former US diplomat now working for the Estonia-based International Center for Defense Studies. If you use military force in the Baltic states, there will be consequences, there will be war. It needs to be that clear.

A return to the conventional warfare and military muscle-flexing of the past appears to be the easy part. The generation of military minds overseeing NATOs transformation is steeped in Cold War history.

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Latvia and U.S. Play War Games as Tensions with Russia Grow