PULI ALAM – Thirty US troops, including special forces, died when the Taliban shot down their helicopter, officials said, in the biggest single loss for foreign troops in the decade-long war.
Seven Afghan special forces were also among the dead late Friday when a rocket fired by Taliban insurgents hit their Chinook as it began to take off shortly after a firefight in Wardak province, southwest of the capital Kabul.
US television networks reported that 25 of the dead were US Navy SEALs. Sources in the Obama administration told AFP that the victims came from the army, navy and air force, without saying if they were SEALs.
Contrary to several US media reports, the dead were “not part” of the special forces team that killed Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a May raid in Pakistan, the sources said.
A statement from Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s office said all of the US victims were special forces, and that 31 of them had been killed.
“The president of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan expresses his sympathy and deep condolences to US President Barack Obama and the families of the victims,” the statement said.
Obama paid tribute to the Americans and Afghans who died and said the incident was a reminder of the “extraordinary sacrifices” made by the men and women of the military and their families.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta vowed the US would “stay the course” in Afghanistan.
US special forces play a key role in the fight against the Taliban by hunting down and killing its fighters in targeted night raids, but Kabul has repeatedly blamed such operations for causing civilian deaths.
The incident, after an anti-Taliban operation, is the deadliest for foreign troops in Afghanistan since American and other international forces ousted the insurgents from power in 2001 in the wake of the September 11 attacks.
The previous biggest death toll saw 16 American soldiers killed in 2005 when a Taliban rocket hit their Chinook in the eastern province of Kunar.
One man who said he witnessed Friday’s crash, Mohammad Saber, told AFP that the helicopter plummeted during a late-night operation in his village.
“At around 10:00pm last night (1730 GMT), we heard helicopters flying over us,” he said. “We saw one of the helicopters land on the roof of a house of a Taliban commander, then shooting started.”
“The helicopter later took off but soon after taking off it went down and crashed. There were other helicopters flying as well.”
The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement that 30 of its troops, one civilian interpreter and seven Afghan commandos were killed. All the ISAF service members were from the US, it said.
“No words describe the sorrow we feel in the wake of this tragic loss,” said General John R. Allen, an ISAF commander.
Wardak provincial spokesman Shahidullah Shahid said the Chinook was shot down in Sayd Abad district as it was taking off. “A rocket fired by the insurgents hit it and completely destroyed it,” he added.
The Afghan army commander for the region, General Abdul Razeq, also said the helicopter was “shot down by a rocket fired by the enemy.”
Chinooks are widely used by coalition forces in Afghanistan for transporting large numbers of troops and supplies around the war zone.
The defense ministry in Kabul said the seven local troops who died were members of Afghanistan’s special forces.
Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed the group was responsible for shooting down the Chinook, but acknowledged that eight insurgents had been killed.
There are currently about 140,000 foreign soldiers in Afghanistan, around 100,000 of them from the US, but all combat forces are due to leave by the end of 2014.
Some troop withdrawals have already begun as part of a transition that has already seen Afghan security forces take control of key regions this summer.
A total of 342 foreign troops – 279 from the United States – have now been killed in Afghanistan this year, according to an AFP tally based on the independent website iCasualties.org.
Foreign troop commanders say the east of the country, close to Pakistan where insurgents have hideouts, will likely increasingly overtake the south as the focus of the war in coming months.