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U.S. soldiers leave Camp Nathan Smith in Kandahar on a courtesy call Wednesday to a local authority figure and security provider for the camp. Troops are readying a big offensive this summer against the Taliban.
U.S. soldiers leave Camp Nathan Smith in Kandahar on a courtesy call Wednesday to a local authority figure and security provider for the camp. Troops are readying a big offensive this summer against the Taliban.
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KABUL — Insurgents shot down a NATO helicopter in southern Afghanistan on Wednesday, killing four U.S. soldiers aboard, while another coalition service member died in a roadside bombing.

The attacks made the first nine days of June one of the deadliest spans this year for Western troops mired in the nearly nine-year war against the Taliban insurgency.

The five coalition service members were killed in the country’s volatile Helmand province, part of the Taliban’s heartland in the south and a key focus of President Barack Obama’s troop surge aimed at crippling the insurgency and forcing it to negotiate an end to the war. So far this month, 29 coalition troops have been killed in Afghanistan, a rate of more than three deaths a day.

Nineteen of those deaths have involved U.S. soldiers, according to , a website that tracks U.S. and NATO military deaths in Afghanistan.

The latest troop deaths come as U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, speaking in London, warned that the U.S. and its Western allies in Afghanistan will have to show signs of gaining the upper hand against militants by the end of the year or risk losing popular backing for the war.

“All of us, for our publics, are going to have to show by the end of the year that our strategy is on the track, making some headway,” Gates said as he prepared for meetings later this week in Brussels with defense ministers from NATO-allied nations.

Defeating the Taliban in its strongholds in southern Afghanistan is a crucial component of Washington’s strategy against the insurgency.

U.S. commanders are readying a major offensive this summer against militants in the southern city of Kandahar, the Taliban’s former headquarters. Insurgents, however, have fought back with stepped-up attacks against coalition troops and Afghan security forces in the south.

Afghanistan’s ousted intelligence chief told The Associated Press on Wednesday that President Hamid Karzai is pursuing a dangerous strategy in seeking peace with the Taliban because the insurgents are giving nothing in return.

Amrullah Saleh said the Taliban have only responded to Karzai’s conciliatory approach with “violence, destruction and intimidation.”

He also voiced concern over the Afghan leader’s plan to free militant prisoners without prior screening by the National Directorate of Security which he led for six years, acting as the key partner of the CIA.

Meanwhile, an official in southern Afghanistan says 39 people have been killed in a blast in Kandahar province’s Argandab district. He said more than 70 people were wounded.

ColoradoFort Carson honors three killed in Afghanistan.

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