U.S. service member, 2 Afghans troops killed in separate incidents in Afghanistan

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KABUL, Afghanistan -- The U.S. military said Saturday that a service member has been killed in Afghanistan, while in a separate incident two Afghan soldiers died when their helicopter failed to land properly. The brief U.S. military statement did not provide further details on the soldier's identity or the time or place of death. 

The death brings the U.S. combat death toll this year in Afghanistan to eight, according to Reuters. It also comes just weeks after Major Brent Taylor, the mayor of North Ogden, Utah, was killed in an insider attack in Kabul. 

Some 15,000 U.S. soldiers are currently serving in Afghanistan. More than 2,400 have been killed in 17 years of combat.   

The two Afghan soldiers died Saturday when their helicopter made an "emergency landing" in the southern Kandahar province due to a technical problem, Defense Ministry spokesman Ghafor Ahmad Jawad said. He said two other soldiers were wounded when the helicopter caught fire after landing. The Taliban claim to have shot the helicopter down.

In the capital, Kabul, a senior religious scholar was shot and killed, said Basir Mujahid, a spokesman for the capital's police chief. No one immediately claimed the killing of Abdul Basir Haqqani, but police arrested a man with a pistol near the scene of the shooting, Mujahid said.

Also Saturday, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group in statement posted on its Aamaq website claimed responsibility for the suicide attack on Friday inside an army base in eastern Khost province which killed at least 27 army soldiers.

"The attack was carried out by a suicide bomber who detonated his explosive vest among them (army soldiers)," the ISIS statement said, without mentioned that the attack occurred inside a mosque at the base.

The attack came just days after a suicide bomber killed 55 religious scholars gathered in the Afghan capital, Kabul, to celebrate the holiday marking the birth of Islam's Prophet Muhammad. The Taliban denied involvement in that bombing, which also wounded 94 people.

The U.S. and NATO formally concluded their combat mission in 2014, but still provide vital support to Afghan security forces, who have been struggling in recent years to combat a resurgent Taliban and an Islamic State affiliate. 

International forces have also suffered from so-called insider attacks in recent months, in which Afghan soldiers or police have opened fire on them.

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