U.S. forces and Afghan police kill over 20 Taliban
September 07 12:05:03 PM, Yahoo News

Reuters - U.S.-led soldiers, backed by air support, and Afghan police killed more than 20 Taliban fighters in two separate clashes, officials said on Sunday.
A U.S. military statement said its forces killed more than 10 insurgents during an operation in the southeast province of Khost on Saturday, and did not mention any casualties on its side.
In Helmand, a southern province also regarded as a Taliban stronghold, militants lost 10 men in an assault on a police post, provincial police chief Mohammad Hussein Andiwal said. Four police were wounded defending their post.
The Taliban could not be reached immediately for comment.
Ousted from power in 2001 after refusing to surrender its al Qaeda guests, the Taliban militia intensified a campaign in 2005 to drive out foreign forces and bring down President Hamid Karzai's government.
Suicide bombers and roadside bomb attacks, ambushes and kidnapping are the guerrillas' favored tactics.
On Sunday, a suicide bomber killed himself in an attack on a NATO convoy in the western province of Herat, but there were no other casualties, according to witnesses.
On Saturday, the Taliban abducted four Afghan employees of a security firm in Maidan Wardak province, on the main highway southwest of Kabul, a provincial official said.
(Writing by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
Related articles
- More U.S. funds freed for Mexico's drug fight
Washington releases an additional $99 million as part of an aid package to help security forces in their battle with drug cartels.
… - Rockets from Lebanon hit Israel amid Gaza offensive
Reuters - Several rockets fired from Lebanon struck northern Israel Thursday, slightly wounding two people, police and medics said, in attacks seen as linked to Israel's war on Hamas Islamists in the Gaza… - Obama's pick to lead on health care gets hearing
AP - Showing the emphasis that some lawmakers are putting on health care issues this year, former Sen. Tom Daschle will be the first of President-elect Barack Obama's Cabinet choices to undergo a hearing. - Venezuela to keep sending free fuel to US poor
AP - President Hugo Chavez will keep donating heating oil for poor American families in a costly decision that suggests the Venezuelan leader wants to keep to his pledges — and buttress his image — in… - Anti-narcotics agencies target West Africa routes
South American producers are increasingly using Guinea-Bissau, Senegal and other countries in the region as transit hubs to Europe.
… - Obama to lay out case for stimulus in speech
Reuters - President-elect Barack Obama will call for quick action on a fiscal stimulus package in a speech on Thursday aimed at reassuring Americans that he is determined to stem the economic crisis. - India vows to end fraud as Satyam scandal shocks
Reuters - India vowed to strengthen laws to prevent corporate fraud after Satyam Computer, the country's fourth-largest software company, shocked investors by revealing profits had been falsely inflated… - Richardson advisor worked for firm under investigation
The friend and fundraiser was once employed by the Beverly Hills company at the center of a federal inquiry.
… - Report: US had unrealistic goals in Afghanistan
AP - The United States and its partners have shortchanged Afghanistan by focusing on short-term goals pursued without a cohesive strategy or a clear understanding of the way the poor, decentralized country… - Citigroup, U.S. senators in mortgage legislation talks: report
Reuters - Citigroup Inc is leading other lenders in advanced talks with key U.S. senators on legislation that would allow judges to set new repayment terms for millions of mortgage holders who wind up… - Citigroup sees synchronized global recession in 2009
Reuters - Citigroup forecast a synchronized global recession in 2009 and said developed economies may "flirt" with deflation while emerging market economies will slow sharply, adding that global corporate… - Rain and melting snow bring floods to Washington
AP - More than 30,000 people were urged to leave their flood-endangered western Washington homes as swollen rivers, mudslides and avalanches engulfed neighborhoods and roadways. - Ore. teens largely ignoring cell phone driving ban
AP - The chances that a teenager will be cited for talking on a cell phone while driving are pretty much zero in Oregon, a consequence of the way the law is written and a problem other states may be facing. - Pakistan acknowledges suspect in Mumbai attacks is a Pakistani
Caught between international and nationalistic pressures, the Islamabad government has been reluctant to confirm Pakistani ties to the terrorist attack in India.
… - Arab media portray Palestinians as courageous victims
They offer images of carnage and emotional narratives. Israelis, the U.S. and even Arab leaders are pilloried.
… - Extreme Alaska cold grounds planes, disables cars
AP - Ted Johnson planned on using a set of logs to a build a cabin in Alaska's interior. Instead he'll burn some of them to stay warm. - Attack on Israel from Lebanon threatens 2nd front
AP - Lebanese militants fired rockets into northern Israel early Thursday, threatening to open a new front for the Jewish state as it pushed forward with its offensive in the Gaza Strip. - More species invasions feared for Great Lakes
AP - Dozens of foreign species could spread across the Great Lakes in coming years despite policies designed to keep them out, causing significant environmental and economic damage, a federal report says. - Rain and melting snow bring floods to Washington
AP - More than 30,000 people were urged to leave their flood-endangered western Washington homes as swollen rivers, mudslides and avalanches engulfed neighborhoods and roadways. - Ukraine-Russia talks ended with no result: Naftogaz
Reuters - Gas talks overnight between Ukraine's state energy firm Naftogaz and Russia's gas export monopoly, Gazprom, ended with no concrete results, the head of Naftogaz was quoted as saying on Thursday. - Rockets from Lebanon hit Israel
The day after fighting eases in Gaza, Israel retaliates for at least three rockets that injured two women in the north. It's unknown who fired them.
… - Buyers rejoice: Manhattan home prices finally fall
Reuters - It took war, the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression and the collapse of some of New York's famed investment banks, but Manhattan apartment prices are finally falling. - Ill. panel to grill Burris on Senate appointment
AP - Illinois Republicans are promising tough questions Thursday for Senate-appointee Roland Burris on why he accepted a position offered by disgraced Gov. Rod Blagojevich and whether he promised the governor… - Rocket attacks jolt Israel as Gaza war blazes on
AFP - Rockets fired into northern Israel from Lebanon on Thursday jolted efforts to end the war in Gaza where Israeli jets carried out mass strikes on smuggling tunnels.