Saturday 20 November 2010

In Lisbon, They Talk. In Afghanistan, They Die.

Christopher Davies, 22, was the 100th British serviceman to die this year in a war that Nato's leaders – gathered today for a crucial summit – have no idea how to win.
By Michael Savage and Kim Sengupta in Lisbon
Saturday, 20 November 2010
Fifty heads of state are attending the summit with co-operation on a common European anti-missile system and Afghanistan topping the agenda
EPA
Fifty heads of state are attending the summit with co-operation on a common European anti-missile system and Afghanistan topping the agenda
Christopher Davies, a guardsman with the 1st Battalion Irish Guards, has been named as the 100th member of Britain's armed forces fighting in Afghanistan to die this year.
The 22-year-old's death was given extra poignancy yesterday as world leaders gathered to formulate an exit strategy from the bloody and intractable campaign. It has now claimed the lives of 345 British servicemen and women since it began in 2001.
Guardsman Davies, from St Helens, Merseyside, died after being ambushed and shot by insurgents while on patrol in the Nahr-e Saraj district, Helmand Province, on Wednesday. He was the devoted father of one young daughter, Lucy. Lance Corporal Bryan Philips, one of his colleagues, said he "had so many pictures of his daughter and talked about her constantly". More from the Indy here.

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