Coalition casualties in Afghanistan

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Coalition fatalities per month since the start of the war[1]
Number of foreign soldiers killed in Afghanistan

 USA: 2,461*
 UK: 457
 Canada: 159*
 France: 90
 Germany: 62
 Italy: 53
 Poland: 44[2]
 Denmark: 43
 Australia: 41
 Spain: 35*
 Georgia: 32
 Romania: 27
 Netherlands: 25
 Turkey: 15
 Czech Republic: 14
 New Zealand: 10
 Norway: 10
 Estonia: 9
 Hungary: 7
 Sweden: 5
 Latvia: 4
 Slovakia: 3
 Finland: 2
 Jordan: 2
 Portugal: 2
 South Korea: 2
 Albania: 1
 Belgium: 1

 Bulgaria: 1
 Croatia: 1
 Lithuania: 1
 Montenegro: 1

TOTAL: 3,612

Throughout the

CIA operatives.[4]

In addition to these deaths in Afghanistan, another 59 U.S. and one Canadian soldier were killed in other countries while supporting operations in Afghanistan. The total also omits the 62 Spanish soldiers returning from Afghanistan who died in Turkey on 26 May 2003, when their plane crashed.

During the first five years of the war, the vast majority of coalition deaths were American, but between 2006 and 2011, a significant proportion were amongst other nations, particularly the United Kingdom and Canada which have been assigned responsibility for the flashpoint provinces of

Second World War."[5] Additionally, there have been 95 fatalities among troops from the non-NATO contributors to the coalition (Georgia, Australia, Sweden, New Zealand, Finland, Jordan, South Korea and Albania
).

With 711 Operation Enduring Freedom and ISAF deaths, 2010 was the deadliest year for foreign military troops since the U.S. invasion in 2001, continuing the trend that occurred every year since 2003.[1]

In 2009, there were 7,228 improvised explosive device (IED) attacks in Afghanistan, a 120% increase over 2008, and a record for the war.[6][7] Of the 512 foreign soldiers killed in 2009, 448 were killed in action. 280 of those were killed by IEDs.[8] In 2010, IED attacks in Afghanistan wounded 3,366 U.S. soldiers, which is nearly 60% of the total IED-wounded since the start of the war.[9] Of the 711 foreign soldiers killed in 2010, 630 were killed in action. 368 of those were killed by IEDs, which is around 36% of the total IED-killed since the start of the war to date.[1] Insurgents planted 14,661 IEDs in 2010, a 62% increase over the previous year.[10]

Details regarding the casualties

Afghanistan

[11]

Albania

There has been one recorded fatality among Albanian troops. Captain Feti Vogli was killed in Herat in February 2012,[12] another soldier was wounded[13]

Local Afghans pay respect during the memorial service in honor of Albanian Army Capt. Feti Vogli

Australia

The repatriation ceremony for Australian Private Gregory Michael Sher, killed in southern Afghanistan in 2009, making him the first Australian Defence Force soldier to be killed by indirect fire since 1992.

The Australian forces in Afghanistan have suffered 41 fatalities (34 in action)[14] 261 soldiers have been wounded.[15]

Also, at least one Australian civilian (David Savage, formerly a senior officer with the Department of Foreign Affairs working as an adviser to AusAID) was wounded in Afghanistan.[16]

Belgium

One Belgian soldier died of meningitis while serving in Afghanistan, 14 soldiers have been wounded in action.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24]

United Kingdom

Camp Bastion

As of 11 October 2015, the British forces have suffered 456 fatalities[25] and 2,188 wounded in action, another 5,251 have suffered from disease or non-battle injuries. Of these, 404 soldiers were killed as a result of hostile action, while 49 are known to have died either as a result of illness, non-combat injuries or accidents, or have not yet officially been assigned a cause of death pending the outcome of an investigation.[26] The vast majority of fatalities have taken place since the redeployment of

Helmand province
in 2006, as only five men died between April 2002 and early March 2006.

Bulgaria

Bulgaria, have one casualty in Afghanistan.[27] At least 7 Bulgarian soldiers have been wounded in Afghanistan.[28][29][30]

Canada

Canada's role in Afghanistan, consisting of operations against the Taliban and other insurgents in southern Afghanistan (Kandahar Province), has resulted in the largest number of fatal casualties for any single Canadian military mission since the Korean War. A total of 157* members of the Canadian Forces have died in Afghanistan between February 2002 and 29 October 2011. Of these, 132 were due to enemy actions, including 97 due to IEDs or landmines, 22 due to RPG, small arms or mortar fire, and 13 due to suicide bomb attacks. Another six Canadian soldiers died due to friendly fire from their American allies while conducting combat training operations. An additional 19 Canadian soldiers have died in Afghanistan as a result of accidents or non-combat circumstances; 6 in vehicle accidents, 3 unspecified non-combat-related deaths, 3 suicide deaths, 2 in a helicopter crash, 2 from accidental falls, 2 from accidental gunshots and 1 death from an illness.[31][32] 635 soldiers had been wounded in action and 1,412 received non-battle injuries since April 2002, up to their withdrawal in March 2014.[33]

Croatia

Since November 2006, at least 9 Croatian soldiers have been wounded and injured in Afghanistan [34][35][36][37][38][39][40] On 24 July 2019 three Croatian soldiers were wounded in a motorcycle suicide attack. One of the wounded soon succumbed to head injuries while the other two are stable with serious arm and leg trauma. LCpl Josip Briški (1992.-2019.) is the first Croatian soldier to die in Afghanistan.[41]

Czech Republic

14 Czech soldiers were killed in Afghanistan[42] and at least 26 others were wounded.[43]

Denmark

Denmark, a NATO member, sent 9,500 personnel to Afghanistan between January 2002 and 1 July 2013. They were mostly stationed in Helmand province as part of NATO's International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF).

Denmark's first three deaths were the result of an accident during the disposal of a Soviet-era

Helmand province. 37 soldiers have been killed in various hostile engagements or as a result of friendly fire, and 6 have been killed in non-combat related incidents, bringing the number of Danish fatalities to 43,[44][45] being the highest loss per capita within the coalition forces.[46] In addition, 214 soldiers were wounded in action and injured.[47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56]

In addition, one Danish EUPOL civilian staff member was killed in 2014 in Kabul.[57]

Estonia

Nine Estonian soldiers have died in Afghanistan: eight have been killed in action and one in an accident, 92 soldiers have been wounded in action.[58]

Finland

Two Finnish soldiers were killed by hostile action in Afghanistan, at least 11 soldiers have been wounded[59][60][61][62][63][64][65]

France

A total of 90 French soldiers have died thus far. 71 soldiers have been killed in action, of the 19 others: seven have died in vehicle accidents, one in a helicopter crash, two committed suicide, two have drowned, one was killed by a lightning strike, two died from a non-hostile gunshot wound, one died by friendly fire, one died in an accidental explosion, and one died of unknown causes. According to the website Mémoire des Hommes (website of the French Ministry of Armed Forces), 52 soldiers were killed in action, 7 died of accident and 31 died from unspecified causes.[66] Among these 90 casualties, 71 were recognized Mort pour la France and 19 were recognized Non Mort pour la France.

See also: French forces casualties in Afghanistan [fr].

The largest number of soldiers killed was when French troops were ambushed in the area of Sirobi, some 50 km (31 mi) east of Kabul, in August 2008. Ten French troops were killed and a further 21 wounded in the attack – the heaviest loss of troops France has suffered since deploying to Afghanistan in 2001. A total of 44 French soldiers were killed in Tagab district, by far the deadliest area patrolled by the force and a stronghold of the Taliban and other insurgent groups.[67]

An additional 725 French soldiers were wounded and injured in Afghanistan.[68]

Georgia

U.S. President Barack Obama visiting a wounded Georgian LTC Alexandre Tugushi at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

Georgia, the largest non-NATO contributor to the war effort, has lost 32 soldiers in Afghanistan[69] with 435 wounded since 2010.[70] The first Georgian fatality occurred on 5 September 2010, when 28 years old Lieutenant Mukhran Shukvani was killed in a sniper attack and Corporal Alexandre Gitolendia was seriously wounded.[71] Four more Georgian soldiers were killed by a landmine during combat operations on 1 October 2010, in Helmand.[72] On 21 February 2011 Georgia lost another soldier, George Avaliani, while two others were wounded.[73] On 14 March 2011, one of the two injured died in a hospital in Germany and on 27 May 2011 another soldier died. On 21 June a ninth Georgian soldier died of injuries sustained during an attack.[74][75][76] On 31 August 2011, junior sergeant Rezo Beridze was killed by sniper fire during a patrol mission,[77] Corporal Besarion Naniashvili died on 30 December 2011,[78] 6 January 2012 Corporal Shalva Pailodze was killed,[79] on 22 February 2012 Georgian Ministry of Defense announced death of Corporals – Valerian Beraia, Ruslan Meladze and Paata Kacharava, their combat vehicle exploded following an insurgent attack.[80] Sergeant Valerian Khujadze exploded on an IED (Improvised Explosive Device) and died from the injuries.[81] Corporal Givi Pantsuala, wounded in January 2012 succumbed to his wounds at a hospital in Gori, Georgia on 28 July 2012, bringing the total number of the Georgian military death toll to 18.[82] On 29 December 2012, Defense Minister of Georgia Alasania held a special briefing regarding to the death of Georgian Sergeant Giorgi Kikadze who missed in Afghanistan on 19 December. On 13 May 2013, 3 Georgian soldiers: Cpl Alexander Kvitsinadze, Lower Sergeant Zviad Davitadze and Cpl Vladimer Shanava were killed after a suicide attack on 42nd Battalion military base. 27 more were wounded.[83] On 6 June 2013 a truck bomb hitting the Georgian military base killed 7 and injured 9 servicemen, bringing the total of casualties to 29.[84]

Germany

A total of 59 German ISAF soldiers and 3

EUPOL officers have been killed and 245 service personnel have been wounded in action.[85][86]

Greece

In 2005, two Greek soldiers were injured in Kabul, Afghanistan following the detonation of an improvised explosive device.[87]

Hungary

Seven Hungarians died in Afghanistan. Two EOD members were killed by IEDs. Two were killed in a convoy attack by the Taliban. Two died in a vehicle accident during a convoy-escort task. One died because of a heart attack.

Also, 14 Hungarian soldiers have been wounded in action.[88][89][90][91]

Iceland

Three Icelandic personnel were wounded in an attack in 2004.[92]

Italy

A total of 53 Italians have died in Afghanistan: 34 killed in action, nine died in vehicle accidents, two of heart attacks, one due to an accidental weapon discharge, four of illness, one in an accidental airplane crash and one committed suicide. Of the 34 who died in combat, one had died from injuries sustained a week before. The soldier had been captured and was injured in the raid to rescue him. One other Italian soldier was captured but he was rescued safely.[93][94]

Jordan

A member of the Jordanian intelligence agency Dairat al-Mukhabarat al-Ammah was killed in the Forward Operating Base Chapman attack. Also, a Jordanian soldier was killed and three were wounded while escorting a humanitarian convoy in Logar province on 22 May 2011.[95]

Latvia

Three Latvian soldiers (Edgars Ozoliņš, Voldemārs Anševics and Andrejs Merkuševs) were killed in Afghanistan, another one[96] (corporal Dāvis Baltābols[97]) died in German military hospital in 2009 and at least 11 soldiers have been wounded.[98][99][100][101][102][103]

Lithuania

One Lithuanian soldier, Arūnas Jarmalavičius, was killed in Afghanistan, and at least 13 have been wounded.[104][105][106][107][108][109]

North Macedonia

At least 4 Macedonian soldiers have been wounded in Afghanistan.[110]

Montenegro

One soldier (Mijailo Perišić) died in Afghanistan after suffering a heart attack.[111]

Netherlands

A total of 25 Dutch servicemen were killed in Afghanistan.

Uruzgan. After that 19 soldiers were killed in action between 2007 and 2010. Finally, the last soldier to die was from an illness a month before the contingent withdrew from the country in December 2010. 140 soldiers were wounded in action.[113]

New Zealand

Ten

New Zealand SAS was killed in Kabul on 18 August 2011.[116] Lance Corporal Leon Smith, also of the New Zealand SAS, was killed on 27 September 2011 in Wardak province.[117] On 3 April 2012, Corporal Douglas Hughes died in Bamyan Province.[118] On 5 August 2012, Lance Corporals Rory Malone and Pralli Durrer, were killed in Bamyan Province in a firefight with insurgents.[119] Most recently, Lance Corporal Jacinda Baker, Private Richard Harris, and Corporal Luke Tamatea were killed on 19 August 2012 when their vehicle was hit by an IED.[120] Lance Corporal Baker is New Zealand's first female casualty in a combat role since women were allowed to serve on the frontline in 2000.[121] In November 2012, New Zealand Prime Minister John Key confirmed a coalition airstrike had killed Abdullah Kalta, the Taliban commander believed responsible for the deaths of O'Donnell, Baker, Harris and Tamatea.[122]

Norway

10 Norwegian ISAF soldiers have been killed in action in Afghanistan.[123]

At least 940 soldiers have been wounded in action or injured in accidents[124][125][126][127][128]

In addition, one Norwegian military advisor (Lt. Col. Siri Skare) was killed in the 2011 Mazar-i-Sharif attack.[129]

Poland

44 Polish soldiers (including a military civilian medic and one

JW GROM member) have been killed. 41 in action, 2 died due to a non-combat cause and 1 died in a vehicle accident.[2] At least 231 soldiers and civilian ISAF members have been wounded in action.[130]

Portugal

Portugal sent at least 196 soldiers to Afghanistan as part of the International Security Assistance Force, one duty of which was guarding the airport in Kabul.

Two Portuguese soldiers have been killed in action in Afghanistan and at least 10 have been wounded.[131][132][133][134]

Romania

27 Romanian soldiers have been killed in action in Afghanistan,[135][136] while at least 131 soldiers have been wounded in action.[137][138][139][140][141][142][143][144][145]

Slovakia

3 Slovak soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan, at least 8 soldiers have been wounded.[146][147]

Slovenia

At least 2 Slovenian soldiers[148] and one Slovenian civilian expert were injured.[149]

South Korea

A South Korean officer (Captain Kim Hyo-sung, 33) was accidentally shot by a fellow officer (Major Lee Kyu-sang, 37) while in a row for not following an order to speak quietly on the telephone.

Bagram Air Base.[151]

Spain

Of the 35 Spanish deaths, 17 died in August 2005 when the

2003 Yak-42 plane crash in Turkey on their way back to Spain from Afghanistan.[152]

Sweden

Five Swedish soldiers have been killed in action since 2005. Three in two separate IED incidents and two in an ambush by an ANP uniform wearing insurgent. At least 13 soldiers were wounded[153][154][155][156][157]

Also, two[158][159] local translators working with the Swedish PRT have been killed.

Turkey

The Turkish Army suffered its first deaths on 14 July 2009, when two soldiers were killed in a road traffic accident in Faryab province, between Mazar-i Sharif and Kabul. One of the two killed was the commander of the Turkish contingent of ISAF troops in Afghanistan.[160] On 16 March 2012, 12 Turkish soldiers were killed when their helicopter crashed into a house in Kabul.[161] On 26 February 2015, one Turkish soldier was killed and another wounded in a suicide-bombing in Kabul.[162]

United States

Since the start of U.S. military operations in Afghanistan through mid-2019, nearly 2,400 American servicemembers have died.[163] Additionally, 20,719 U.S. service members have been wounded in hostile action, according to the Defense Department.[3]

Of the United States deaths, 1,922 have died in hostile action. Included in these numbers are 18 CIA operatives that were killed in Afghanistan: 16 by hostile fire, including seven in a suicide bomb attack on a military base, one in an accident and one committed suicide.[3][164] The independent website iCasualties has put the total number of U.S. deaths at 2,355.[165] This number is by 9 higher than the Department of Defense's tally which is 2,346, when including the intelligence operatives.[3]

War related out-of-country deaths

Coalition deaths in other countries as the result of the war

 US: 59
 Spain: 62
 Canada: 1

TOTAL: 122

In addition to the 2,313 American deaths in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Uzbekistan, 59 U.S. soldiers died in Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Kyrgyzstan, Germany, Oman, Jordan, Turkey, Yemen, the Arabian sea, the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea and the Mediterranean, while supporting operations in Afghanistan. Among them are also a Marine, a civilian DoD employee, two military airmen and a special forces member who were killed in action while supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.[1][3][166]

62 Spanish soldiers died in a

Yak-42 plane crash in Turkey on their way back to Spain from Afghanistan.[152]

One Canadian soldier was found dead of non-combat-related causes at Camp Mirage, a forward logistics base in the United Arab Emirates near Dubai.[167]

See also

Notes

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  3. ^ a b c d e U.S. Defense Department. Defenselink Casualty Report
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  5. ^ Robert Gates (10 June 2011). "Reflections on the status and future of the transatlantic alliance". Security & Defence Agenda. Archived from the original on 15 June 2011. Retrieved 13 June 2011. Consider that when I became Secretary of Defense in 2006 there were about 20,000 non-U.S. troops from NATO nations in Afghanistan. Today, that figure is approximately 40,000. More than 850 troops from non-U.S. NATO members have made the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan. For many allied nations these were the first military casualties they have taken since the end of the Second World War.
  6. ^ Day, Thomas L.; Landay, Jonathan S. (28 December 2009). "U.S. intelligence: 'Time is running out' in Afghanistan". McClatchy Washington Bureau. Archived from the original on 2 February 2010. Retrieved 13 June 2011.
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  35. ^ WikiLeaks documents show Croatian soldiers may be facing more risk in Afghanistan than reported to public // "Croatian Times" 28 June 2010
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  37. ^ Hrvatski vojnik u Afganistanu nehotice ranio kolegu čisteći oružje Archived 19 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine // "novilist.hr" 20 June 2011
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    Hrvatski vojnik u Afganistanu pištoljem je ranio sebe i kolegu // "24 SATA" 8 March 2012
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  43. ^ 2 wounded (March 2008),[1] 4 wounded (May 2008),[2] 3 wounded (Sep. 2008),[3] 7 wounded (Oct. 2008),[4] 3 wounded (April 2009),[5] Archived 18 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine 1 wounded (April 2010),[6] 2 wounded (May 2011),[7] 1 wounded (July 2011),[8] 1 wounded (April 2012),[9] 1 wounded (Sep. 2012),[10] 1 wounded (July 2014),[11] total of 26 wounded
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  58. ^ "исполнилось десять лет с того момента, как первое эстонское подразделение приступило к несению службы в Афганистане. За это время 9 эстонских солдат погибли, 92 получили ранения."
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    Finnish peacekeeper injured in firefight in Afghanistan Archived 7 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine // "Helsingin Sanomat" 2 October 2006
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    Four Finnish peacekeepers wounded in Afghanistan Archived 21 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine // "Xinhua" 3 October 2009
  61. ^ "A Finnish soldier serving as a peacekeeper in Afghanistan was wounded from an accidental shot in the leg on Tuesday."
    Finnish peacekeeper accidentally wounded on base in Afghanistan Archived 29 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine // "Helsingin Sanomat", 25 August 2010
  62. ^ "Two Finnish and one Swedish peacekeeper were wounded in a rocket launcher attack in Afghanistan on Friday... The peacekeepers' vehicle came under attack in the village of Temorak, about 45 kilometres west of Mazar e Sharif... Finnish Defence Minister Jyri Häkämies expressed regret over the incident. He said for the time being it will not, however, lead to the rethinking of Finland's role in Afghanistan. Since joining the operation in Afghanistan, one Finnish peacekeeper has been killed and eight more have been wounded."
    19.11.2010 Two Finnish Peacekeepers Injured in Afghanistan
  63. ^ "One Finnish peacekeeper in Afghanistan was wounded slightly in a grenade attack on a patrol on Sunday. The incident took place some 40 kilometres west of Mazar-e-Sharif."
    21.11.2010 Another Finnish peacekeeper wounded in Afghanistan
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    16.03.2011 Finnish Peacekeeper Injured in Afghanistan
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