KABUL, Afghanistan -- U.S. and Afghan soldiers killed five militants during a large-scale operation targeting Taliban and al-Qaida fighters in a volatile eastern region near Pakistan, the U.S. military said Tuesday.\nThe renewed violence in Kunar province came as Afghanistan urged neighboring Pakistan to do more to curb militancy on their shared frontier, drawing an angry rebuke from Islamabad, which has deployed 80,000 soldiers to the region.\nTwo U.S. soldiers, meanwhile, were wounded when a roadside bomb exploded near their vehicle in the southern Zabul province's Argandab district, military spokesman Lt. Mike Cody said.\nThe soldiers were in stable condition. It was unclear who was behind the blast, but Taliban militants have claimed responsibility for rising violence throughout the region.\nOn Monday, coalition forces shot dead five militants near Kunar's provincial capital of Asadabad, about 105 miles northeast of Kabul, after a patrol spotted a group of seven, a U.S. military statement said.\nIt was unclear what happened to the remaining two militants.\nSome 2,500 American and Afghan soldiers in Operation Mountain Lion are hunting down extremists loyal to the toppled Taliban regime and their al-Qaida allies, along with armed criminals active in the region.\nOn the Pakistani side of the border opposite Kunar, Pakistani forces deployed in remote villages to stop militants fleeing the U.S.-Afghan operation.\nThey were among tens of thousands Pakistani soldiers deployed in tribal regions to counter increased attacks on Pakistani forces, hunt extremists in the region and stop militants crossing the border.\nBut Afghan President Hamid Karzai's spokesman demanded Tuesday that Pakistan increase efforts to curb terrorism in the frontier region stretching 1,470 miles.\n"We demand more and better cooperation from Pakistan, as well as the international community, against terrorism," Karzai spokesman Rahim Karimi said. "Afghanistan should shake hands as friends with Pakistan and work together in the struggle against terrorism."\nPakistan and Afghan officials believe top al-Qaida and Taliban figures, including Osama bin Laden and his Egyptian deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, may be hiding in the border regions.\nPakistan became a close American ally in the war on terrorism after the Sept. 11 attacks and ended its open support of the Taliban, which had sheltered bin Laden and his al-Qaida forces.\nBut Afghan officials suspect sections of Pakistan's secret service may still be aiding extremist elements inside Afghanistan. Pakistan denies those claims.\nThe bloodshed is a concern for increasing numbers of NATO-led forces, including Americans, British, Canadians and Dutch, who are deploying to the region.\nThe Taliban has vowed to increase attacks against Afghan and coalition forces during the spring and summer months, making use of the thawing of mountain passes blocked by winter ice and snow.\nThe United States has more than 18,000 troops in Afghanistan.\nThe rising violence also is a growing concern to other nations contributing troops under the mandate of NATO, which is doubling its current force of 10,000 troops to about 21,000 by November, as it gradually assumes command of all international forces in the country.\nSome 6,000 mainly British, Canadian and Dutch troops have started moving into the rebellious southern provinces.
U.S. launches large-scale Afghan military operation an
Two soldiers wounded by roadside bombing explodes near their vehicle
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