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3 U.S. soldiers and a contractor killed in bombing in Afghanistan

In this 2014 photo, a U.S. flag is pictured at Bagram Air Base north of Kabul, near where U.S. forces say three U.S. soldiers and a contractor were killed on Monday April 8, 2019.
(Wakil Kohsar / AFP/Getty Images)
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Three American service members and a U.S. contractor were killed when their convoy hit a roadside bomb on Monday near the main U.S. base in Afghanistan, the U.S. forces said. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack.

The U.S. and NATO Resolute Support mission said the four Americans were killed near the Bagram Air Base, north of Kabul, while three others were wounded in the explosion. The base in Bagram district is in the northern province of Parwan and serves as the main U.S. air facility in the country.

The wounded were evacuated and are receiving medical care, the statement said. It added that in accordance with U.S. Department of Defense policy, the names of service members killed in action were being withheld until after the notification of next of kin.

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In its claim of responsibility, the Taliban said that it launched the attack and that one of its suicide bombers detonated his explosives-laden vehicle near the NATO base. The conflicting accounts could not be immediately reconciled.

The fatalities, which bring to seven the number of U.S. soldiers killed this year in Afghanistan, underscore the difficulties in bringing peace to the war-wrecked country even as Washington has stepped up efforts to find a way to end the 18-year war, America’s longest.

There are about 14,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, supporting embattled Afghan forces as they struggle on two fronts — facing a resurgent Taliban that now holds sway over almost half the country, and the Islamic State affiliate, which has sought to expand its footprint in Afghanistan even as its self-proclaimed “caliphate” has crumbled in Syria and Iraq.

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Last year, 13 U.S. service members were killed in Afghanistan.

The Taliban has continued to carry out daily attacks on Afghan security forces despite holding several rounds of peace talks with the United States in recent months. The Taliban has refused to meet with the Afghan government, which it views as a U.S. puppet.

Meanwhile, the Taliban has agreed to take part in an all-Afghan gathering this month in Qatar, where the insurgents maintain a political office. But the Taliban says it will not recognize any government official attending the gathering as a representative of the Kabul government, only as an individual Afghan participant.

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