May 14, 2012, officials in Laghman Province say five Afghan soldiers were killed, and two wounded, after their vehicle ran over a mine.
Pakistani border officials say U.S. forces fired artillery rounds into Pakistan from Afghanistan, the night of May 13. They say U.S. troops fired at least eight mortar rounds from Afghanistan’s Khost Province into Pakistan’s North Waziristan.
Pakistani military officials say they responded in kind.
In Gahzni Province at least seven people were killed when a U.S./NATO supply convoy was ambushed. Mujahideen attacked the private security contractors guarding the convoy. Four security contractors and three civilians were killed.
In Faryab Province, an explosion in a market place killed seven people and wounded eight.
Australia’s Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, re-stated that Aussie Diggers will be leaving Afghanistan by the end of 2014.
According to the Welsh news media, NATO is now considering making the “Taliban” part of the new Afghanistan: “If they’re able to maintain peace in their own country when we leave that for us is winning. That does not mean defeating the Taliban because at the end of the day those people who perhaps support the Taliban inevitably will be part of the political solution that is a peaceful Afghanistan.”-Brigadier Philip Napier, British Army in Wales
The mother of a Welsh soldier killed in Afghanistan says it’s time to face reality: “You’re never going to defeat the Taliban because they can keep replacing everybody that they ever lose….”-Hazel Hunt, son killed in 2009
24 hour, ISAF Joint Command Morning operational update for May 14, 2012: More search and capture missions for “leaders” and “facilitators”, in Kandahar, Paktika, Logar and Nangahar provinces.
In Paktika Province Afghan and occupying forces met resistance and called in an airstrike.
In a separate report Afghan officials claim the day’s operations resulted in 18 Mujahideen killed, four wounded and 11 captured.