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Roadside bombs 'No. 1 threat' to troops in Afghanistan

  • Story Highlights
  • Pentagon agency: 82 incidents in June caused casualties among coalition troops
  • Military has called IEDs the weapon of choice for insurgents in Afghanistan
  • No numbers were provided for July, but such attacks have continued this month
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WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Insurgents' use of roadside bombs has increased dramatically in Afghanistan this year, according to Pentagon statistics, and the United States' top military official is calling them the "No. 1 threat" to troops there.

An IED is exploded by U.S. Marines near the remote village of Baqwa, Afghanistan, in March.

An IED is exploded by U.S. Marines near the remote village of Baqwa, Afghanistan, in March.

In June there were 736 incidents in Afghanistan involving roadside bombs, called improvised explosive devices or IEDs, and 82 "effective attacks," ones that caused casualties among coalition forces, the figures show.

That was up from 263 incidents and 25 effective attacks in February, with the numbers increasing each month, said the Pentagon's Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization, an agency dedicated to thwarting roadside bombs.

The number of coalition forces killed and wounded by such bombs has climbed, though not steadily, from 18 killed and 33 wounded in February to 23 killed and 166 wounded in June, the agency said.

IED casualties

Coalition forces killed or wounded in Afghanistan by insurgent IEDs (improvised explosive devices) in 2009:

February: 18 killed, 33 wounded
March: 19 killed, 56 wounded
April: 6 killed, 52 wounded
May: 12 killed, 96 wounded
June: 23 killed, 166 wounded

Source: Pentagon's Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization

No numbers were provided for July, but such attacks have continued this month. In the latest, roadside bombs killed two NATO-led troops on Thursday, one in eastern Afghanistan and the other in southern Afghanistan.

The military has called IEDs the weapon of choice for insurgents in that country.

And at the National Press Club on Wednesday, Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in response to a reporter's question that the biggest threat to coalition troops in Afghanistan is improvised explosive devices. Video Watch Adm. Mullen address efforts in Afghanistan »

He noted that they "have become more and more sophisticated over time" and that they are being combined with "more and more sophisticated attacks from the Taliban, where they use IEDs as well as other tactics to inflict or to fight our troops."

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