US-led troops kill 40 Taliban in Afghanistan

US-Led Forces have killed about 40 Taliban fighters as they gathered for a meeting in a compound as part of a major operation against the resurgent rebels in southern Afghanistan, the US military said. Foreign troops waited for about 50 rebels,...

US-Led Forces have killed about 40 Taliban fighters as they gathered for a meeting in a compound as part of a major operation against the resurgent rebels in southern Afghanistan, the US military said.

Foreign troops waited for about 50 rebels, including a bomb-making group, to gather for a meeting in the compound in Uruzgan province before striking on Friday, Lieutenant-Colonel Paul Fitzpatrick said in a statement late on Friday.

There was no immediate comment from the Taliban, ousted in 2001 but which has stepped up its operations in the volatile south ahead of NATO troops taking over from the US in the region to allow Washington to pull out about 3,000 soldiers.

A suicide attacker riding on a motorbike blew himself into pieces as he was trying to attack a convoy of Afghan troops in Delaram district of the southwestern province of Nimroz yesterday.

Two soldiers and three civilians were wounded in the attack, Wahidullah Khairzad, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said.

Two coalition soldiers were killed on Friday when their vehicle was blown up by a roadside bomb in eastern Kunar province, bordering Pakistan, another US statement said.

Their nationality was not given. Ghazni province governor Sher Alam Ibrahimi told Reuters five Taliban rebels were killed and at least 12 captured after an hours-long battle with Afghan troops and police on Friday.

In Kandahar province, the Taliban heartland, seven Taliban fighters and a policeman were killed when rebels attacked a police post overnight, a local official said.

Three rebels died when a mine they were planting exploded in neighbouring Helmand province, officials there said.

This week, foreign forces announced a major operation, Mountain Thrust, against the Taliban amid the worst violence since the US-led 2001 invasion.

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