August Is Deadliest Month for US In Afghanistan -- New York Times/AP
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — August has become the deadliest month for U.S. troops in the nearly 10-year-old war in Afghanistan, where international forces have started to go home and let Afghan forces take charge of securing their country.
A record 66 U.S. troops have died so far this month, eclipsing the 65 killed in July 2010, according to a tally by The Associated Press.
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More News On Afghanistan
Deadliest month yet for U.S. in Afghanistan -- CBS/AP
U.S. suffers its deadliest month in Afghanistan after 66 troops die in combat during August -- Daily Mail
August deadliest month for U.S. troops in Afghanistan -- CNN
August is Deadliest Month for U.S. Troops in Afghanistan -- National Journal
FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, Aug 30 -- Alertnet
ISAF Joint Command morning operational update -- Dvids
Combined Force Kills Taliban Insurgent -- US Department of Defense
Three NATO soldiers killed in Afghanistan -- UPI
10 insurgents killed in Afghanistan: NATO -- The Nation
NATO forces kill 18 Taliban in Helmand, Ghazni Tribal elder shot dead in Paktika -- Frontier Post
Militants kill six Afghan policemen -- Press TV
3 Australian commandos cleared of 6 Afghan deaths -- AP
Afghan charges against Australian soldier dropped -- AFP
Rangers awarded for actions in Afghanistan -- Stars and Stripes/McClatchy News
Afghan Taliban victory predicted in letter -- L.A. Times
Mullah Omar: Fine, I Didn’t Want Run Afghanistan, Anyway -- Registan
Talks on new US-Afghan pact strains relations -- AP
U.S.-Taliban talks ruined by leak to media -- SFGate/AP
AP exclusive: U.S.-Taliban talks were making headway -- Mercury News/AP
Secret U.S.-Taliban talks were closing on deal to free kidnapped army sergeant before being scuppered by Karzai aides -- Daily Mail
Missing U.S. soldier caught in middle of Afghan talks -- Chicago Sun Times
Afghanistan endgame: Karzai wins Saudi backing for Taliban reconciliation -- Express Tribune
Afghan president sends would-be child suicide bombers home -- Reuters
Afghan President Pardons Would-Be Suicide Bombers -- NPR
In helping Afghanistan build up its security forces, U.S. is trimming the frills -- Washington Post
Corruption in Afghan government has potential to compromise US military mission, says senator -- The Hill
US has wasted $30bn on Iraq and Afghanistan contracts, report finds -- The Guardian
Policing Afghanistan -- Washington Post Photo Gallery
U.S. Men at War: BlackBerrys and iPads on the Afghan Front -- Time
What the Taliban Want -- Ahmed Rashid, New York Review of Books
The Cost of Ignoring Afghanistan's Politics -- Joshua Foust, The Atlantic