Middle East
Taliban militants ‘reappear’ in Swat valley
Taliban militants have resumed targeted killings of local leaders in Pakistan's troubled Swat valley, officials have told the BBC. Pakistan's army declared the Swat valley free of militants after carrying out an anti-Taliban operation in 2009. A Pakistani army spokesman said three people had died in attacks over the last 10 days. Local journalists say that seven have died in 15 days.
Kabul suicide car bombing ‘kills at least seven’
Kabul set for historic international conference
Some 70 countries are set to attend a historic conference in the Afghan capital Kabul amid some of the deadliest violence of the war. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is among those due to join Tuesday's one-day talks on Afghanistan's future. They expect to hear President Hamid Karzai call for greater control over foreign aid for reconstruction. But Afghanistan's key foreign backers are also seeking assurances as they plan to withdraw troops.
Karzai calls for Afghan security control by 2014
Excerpts Leaked US Afghan war records
Leaked US military records on the war in Afghanistan, which were posted on the Wikileaks website as the Afghan War Diary, are a classified - and previously unreported - daily rundown of incidents of violence and criminality in Afghanistan. The documents offer a snapshot of the grim reality of conditions on the ground in Afghanistan and the challenges facing troops operating there.
North Pakistan clashes ‘leave 27 dead
At least three soldiers and 24 militants have been killed in a series of clashes in a tribal region of north-western Pakistan, officials have said. The battles erupted after about 150 Taliban attacked five paramilitary Frontier Corps checkpoints in and around Baidnami in the Mohmand Agency, one official told the AFP news agency.
Afghanistan Civilian deaths hit ‘record levels’
US ‘well-positioned’ to start Afghan withdrawal – Gates
Hamid Karzai names areas to be handed to Afghan forces
Afghanistan Ban Ki-moon condemns UN staff killings
Bomber kills Kunar elder Malik Zarin
Taliban’s Kandahar raid into second day
US charges six with aiding Pakistani Taliban
‘Twelve dead’ at protest over Nato raid
Afghan road workers killed in Taliban ambush
Afghanistan Suicide blast kills top police commander
Four Nato troops killed by bomb in eastern Afghanistan
Afghanistan’s Karzai US in peace talks with Taliban
France follows US in troop withdrawal
French President Nicolas Sarkozy has announced the phased withdrawal of its 4,000 soldiers serving in Afghanistan. A statement said the French would follow the timetable of US withdrawals announced by President Barack Obama. Mr Obama said 10,000 US troops would pull out this year, with another 23,000 leaving by the end of September 2012.
Taliban say husband and wife in Pakistan suicide attack
Afghan central bank governor Abdul Qadeer Fitrat quits
Kabul hotel attack Nato helicopters kill Taliban
US ‘within reach of strategic defeat of al-Qaeda’
Afghan president’s brother, Ahmad Wali Karzai, killed
France to withdraw a quarter of troops in Afghanistan
Taliban in Pakistan ‘police killing’ video
Lashkar Gah : Nato hands over volatile Afghan city
Mullen focuses on Afghanistan-Pakistan border havens
Taliban raid from Afghanistan kills 25 Pakistan troops
Two killed at Kabul CIA station
Afghanistan ‘suicide attack’ hits city of Herat
Afghanistan mother and daughter stoned and shot dead
Taliban ‘has Afghanistan loya jirga security plan’
Afghan president backs US pact in tribal elders talks
Afghan President Hamid Karzai has told a meeting of tribal elders that a security pact with the US is in the best interests of both nations. He was addressing the gathering, or loya jirga, in the capital, Kabul, amid tight security. The president said that any deal with the US could only work if Afghan sovereignty was respected.
Afghan police killed during Nato night raid
Two Afghan police officers have been killed in a clash with Nato-led forces who were conducting a night-time raid, say officials in Afghanistan. The "friendly fire" incident happened in Ghazni province, southwest of Kabul. Two other Afghan soldiers were injured, according to the provincial governor.
Pakistan ‘to boycott Afghan Bonn talks’ after Nato raid
Pakistan is to boycott talks on Afghanistan's future in protest at a Nato air strike which killed 24 of its soldiers at the weekend, officials say. The night-time attack took place at the Salala checkpoint in Mohmand agency, about 1.5 miles from the poorly delineated border with Afghanistan, early on Saturday morning. The Pakistani army said helicopters and fighter aircraft hit two border posts, killing 24 people and leaving 13 injured. Unnamed Afghan officials quoted in The Wall Street Journal said Saturday's air strike was called in to shield Nato and Afghan forces who had come under fire.