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17 Spanish troops die in Afghan copter crash
(AP)
Updated: 2005-08-16 21:22

Two helicopters carrying NATO-led forces to prepare for next month's elections crashed Tuesday in the desert in western Afghanistan, killing at least 17 Spanish troops, officials said, reported the Associated Press.


Spanish soldiers of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) hold up their guns and salute during a changing of command of Heart's PRT, Provincial Reconstruction Team, from U.S. soldiers to Italian forces in Heart, Afghanistan in this picture taken May 31, 2005. A helicopter belonging to the NATO-led international security force in Afghanistan crashed in the west of the country Tuesday, killing 17 Spanish troops, officials said. The cause was not immediately clear. [AP]

Afghan army commander Abdul Wahab Walizada, whose troops are providing security in the area near Herat, said the aircraft came too close to each other while flying and their rotor blades collided.

But Maj. Andrew Elmes, a spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force in Kabul, said it was too early to know the cause, but it was believed to have been an accident and not due to rebel activity. He said earlier that mechanical failure may have been to blame.

One of the helicopters belonging to the international security force crashed in the desert near Herat, killing 17 Spanish troops ¡ª the first troops from Spain to be killed in Afghanistan, officials said.

The second helicopter made an emergency landing in the same area and an unspecified number of troops on board were believed to be injured, Elmes said, adding that rescuers had reached the site to recover the dead and wounded.

The crash came less than two months after suspected insurgents shot down a U.S. military Chinook helicopter in eastern Kunar province ¡ª a hotbed for Taliban and al-Qaida insurgents ¡ª near the border with Pakistan. All 16 U.S. forces on board were killed.

In Madrid, a Spanish Defense Ministry official, who asked not to be named in compliance with his department's policy, said 12 soldiers and five crew died in Tuesday's crash, but the cause was unknown.

Elmes declined to comment on the nationality of the troops or how many casualties there were, but Herat province is largely free of violence by Taliban-led rebels.

"We do not think the helicopter crashed because of enemy activity. We think it was an accident," he said. "The second helicopter landed heavily. There are survivors from that helicopter."

He said both choppers were on a training mission to support crucial Sept. 18 legislative elections ¡ª the next major step toward democracy for Afghanistan after more than two decades of war and civil strife.

Spain has about 800 troops in Afghanistan assisting the NATO-led security force.

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero broke off his vacation in the Canary Islands to return to Madrid and meet with defense ministry officials, his office said.

The crash was the second major deadly incident involving Spanish troops deployed in Afghanistan. In May 2003, 62 Spanish peacekeepers returning home from Afghanistan died when their Russian-built YAK-42 plane crashed near Trabzon in northwest Turkey. Thirteen Ukrainian and Belarusian crew members of the aircraft also died.

However, those killed in Tuesday's crash were the first Spanish troops to be killed in the country, according to the Spanish Defense Ministry.

In April, 15 U.S. service members and three American civilians were killed when their Chinook went down in a sandstorm while returning to the main U.S. base at Bagram.

NATO's force in Afghanistan includes about 10,000 troops from 36 nations. It maintains security in the capital, Kabul, and the country's north and west. It plans to increase its size by an unspecified amount and take over from the U.S.-led coalition in the violence-wracked south early next year, before gradually moving into the east.



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