August deadliest month for U.S. troops in Afghanistan

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August has been the deadliest month for U.S. forces in Afghanistan since the conflict began nearly 10 years ago.

story.brian.bill.jpg
Brian R. Bill was among those that died in the August Chinook crash.

Sixty-six American troops have died this month, topping July 2010 when 65 troops died, according to a CNN tally.

Almost half the August troop deaths took place on August 6 when insurgents shot down their helicopter[/b] in the eastern central province of Wardak.

Thirty U.S. service members - including 17 Navy SEALs - were killed in that attack, the single largest loss of life for U.S. troops since the Afghan war began in late 2001.

The Taliban claimed militants downed the helicopter with a rocket-propelled grenade.

The surge in U.S. deaths comes as NATO is drawing down and handing over security control to national forces. Some 10,000 U.S. troops are scheduled to depart by year's end, with all U.S. military personnel out of Afghanistan by the end of 2014.
 
its easy to say that and tough to actually do it. Do you really want to just pull out after 10 years and just have everything go back to the way it was? Of course we want our troops back home, but the last 10 years would largely go to waste if we just pulled them out right now
 
And so all those men could die in vein? Id be willing to stake my inheritance that the large majority of soldiers would rather stay and finish their job instead of up and leaving without completing the job their brothers died doing.
 
If the troops pulled out the Afghan National Army would have a shit load more NATO air support than Russia ever gave its communist government when they left.. a government which surprisingly took 3 years to collapse... It would neevr be exactly the same because NATO will never completely abandon the mission.
 
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