At least 21 civilians were killed in airstrikes called in by US Special Forces soldiers fighting with insurgents in southern Afghanistan, officials said today.
Helmand provincial Governor Assadullah Wafa said Taliban fighters sought shelter in villagers' homes during the fighting in the Sangin district yesterday evening, and that subsequent airstrikes killed 21 civilians, including several women and children.
The US-led coalition said militants fired guns, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars at US Special Forces and Afghan soldiers on patrol 15 miles north of Sangin.
Major William Mitchell, a spokesman for the US-led coalition, said troops killed a "significant" number of militants. "We don't have any report of civilian casualties. There are enemy casualties — I think the number is significant," Major Mitchell said.
A resident of the area said five homes in the village of Soro were bombed during the battle, killing 38 people and wounding more than 20.
He said Western troops and Afghan forces had blocked people from entering the area. Death tolls in remote battle sites in Afghanistan are impossible to verify.
Taliban fighters often seek shelter in Afghan homes, leading to civilian casualties, and it is often difficult to determine if people killed in such airstrikes were militants or civilians. The battle left one coalition soldier dead, the US military said.
The military did not release the soldier's nationality, but he was likely an American Special Forces soldier.
Sangin, a militant hotbed in the heart of Afghanistan's biggest opium poppy region, has been the site of heavy fighting in recent weeks. The soldier's death brings to 48 the number of Nato or coalition soldiers who have died in Afghanistan this year.
AP