UPDATED ON:
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
13:24 Mecca time, 10:24 GMT
 
News CENTRAL/S. ASIA
Sarkozy visits Kabul after ambush

Paratroopers await the arrival of the French president [Reuters]

The French president is on an emergency visit to Afghanistan after 10 French soldiers were killed in fighting a day earlier.

Nicolas Sarkozy flew to the French military base on the outskirts of Kabul on Wednesday to visit survivors of the ambush that killed 10 and wounded 21 others.

The Taliban attack was the deadliest on international forces in Afghanistan since the Taliban government was overthrown by a US-led invasion in 2001.

Sarkozy is travelling with Herve Morin, the defence minister, and Bernard Kouchner, the French foreign minister.

The deaths resulted from clashes that had started on Monday when Nato's International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) patrol was attacked in Sarobi district.

The Taliban said it had attacked the troops and blown up several vehicles.

Mullah Zaeef, a former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan, and former inmate of Guantanamo Bay, told Al Jazeera that the US-backed government of Afghanistan has lost control of key areas of the country to the Taliban.

Zaeef said that the government's position is "weak" and that the Taliban is gaining strength.

Zaeef said Sarkozy is visiting because of the unexpectedly "highy casualty" rate and because the EU is increasingly concerned about Taliban control.

Fierce clashes

Sarkozy went to the camp hospital and spoke to 10 of the wounded and other paratroopers who had been engaged in the fighting.

He was due to hold talks with Michel Stollsteiner, a French general who is head of Isaf troops serving in and around Kabul.
  
He also met Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president.
  
Sarkozy said before he left France on Tuesday that his visit was to show the troops that "France is on their side".
  
"In its struggle against terrorism, France has just been hard hit," Sarkozy said.

Sarkozy has insisted that France will not be deterred from its mission in Afghanistan, despite domestic opposition to the military involvement.

About 3,000 soldiers serve in the Isaf - made up of 53,000 troops from nearly 40 nations.

The deaths bring to 176 the number of international soldiers killed in Afghanistan this year.

Twenty-three French troops have now been killed in action or in accidents in Afghanistan since French soldiers were sent in 2002.
  
Sarkozy, who paid a brief visit to Afghanistan in December, has pushed for an expansion in France's military role.

He announced French reinforcements to Afghanistan at a Nato summit in April - drawing criticism from left-wing politicians who saw the move as a sign of French alignment with US policy.

 Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 2
 
maj gen aps chauhan
India
23/08/2008
French casualties in Afghanistan
One is not convinced about the propaganda that NATO is fighting terrorism. This is wholesale murder of civilians on pretext that doesnt hold water. The French are on the wrong side and this they will realise . Afghans never tolerated foreign troops on their soil from times immemorial.

Ayub
Afghanistan
24/08/2008
Sarkozy get out and stay out.
Thankyou Mr.Chauhan for backing that fact.the brits were booted out and the US and Nato are going to get booted out as well.The cowards can murder a few thousand,but ou can kill a whole population.How much longer before they realise this is not a winnable invasion.The brave will triumph and the cowards are going to go home with their tail between their legs.

 
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