Sarkozy visits Afghanistan to boost troop morale after deaths

AFGHANISTAN: FRENCH PRESIDENT Nicolas Sarkozy paid a quick visit to Afghanistan yesterday to bolster French troops following…

AFGHANISTAN:FRENCH PRESIDENT Nicolas Sarkozy paid a quick visit to Afghanistan yesterday to bolster French troops following the deaths of 10 soldiers in a Taliban ambush close to the capital, Kabul, earlier this week.

The losses were the worst suffered by the French army in 25 years and the most serious suffered in a single incident by international forces in Afghanistan since 2002.

The presidential visit, aimed at bolstering the 2,600 French soldiers deployed in the country, as well as shaky domestic public opinion, was carried out at Sarkozy's usual rapid pace.

The French president stood for some time before the coffins of the dead men in a military chapel in Kabul and visited some of the 21 soldiers wounded in the 36-hour running battle which took place about 30 miles east of the city from Monday afternoon until Tuesday morning. Eleven of the most seriously injured men were flown to France yesterday.

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The fight is believed to have started after French troops on a reconnaissance patrol were ambushed by a force of around 100 Taliban as they approached a ridge in a mountainous, rural district north of the town of Sorobi.

A fierce battle developed as air strikes and reinforcements from the Afghan National Army failed to force back the insurgents. According to French minister for defence Hervé Morin, who accompanied Mr Sarkozy to Afghanistan, about 30 Taliban militants were killed and 30 wounded in the clash.

"The Taliban caught us by surprise in an ambush that was extremely well prepared. Our men were not in a position to respond and fell in the first minutes," Mr Morin said. - ( Guardian service)