L’AQUILA, Italy, (Reuters) – Britain said yesterday it had lost eight soldiers in Afghanistan in the space of 24 hours, and Prime Minister Gordon Brown said troops faced a “very hard summer”, suggesting it should brace itself for more losses.
The deaths, announced by the Ministry of Defence, included five who were killed in two blasts while on foot patrol, the highest death toll in a single attack.
Britain has now lost 184 soldiers in Afghanistan since it joined the U.S.-led invasion in 2001, more than the 179 fatalities during its campaign in Iraq that began in 2003.
Fifteen soldiers, including four officers, have been killed in the past 10 days alone.
Brown said there was no question of pulling soldiers out of Afghanistan until the international community had finished its mission there and quelled the threat from the Taliban.
“This is a very hard summer — it’s not over,” Brown told reporters at the G8 summit in Italy. “But it’s vital that the international community sees through its commitments.”