The Afghan National Army will need support beyond 2014, the Australian Prime Minister has said. Photo / AP

Australian special forces will remain in Afghanistan beyond the 2014 deadline for the withdrawal of other troops despite the death of one of their troopers on Sunday night.

A 24-year-old soldier was killed by an improvised explosive device during an operation on the southern border of Uruzgan province.

The war has now claimed the lives of 39 Diggers – seven this year – and wounded another 242.

The latest death came as Australian and Afghan troops conducted a “disruption operation” against an insurgent network in a border area that until last week was the responsibility of American forces.

”The soldier was clearing a compound when an IED detonated, killing him instantly,” Defence Chief General David Hurley said.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard said her thoughts were with the soldier’s family and comrades “at this time of great stress and distress for them.”

But she said Australian Special Forces, which include soldiers from the SAS, and Commandos and the Special Operations Engineer Regiment, would remain after other troops were pulled out.

She said it was expected that there would still be “active fighting” against Taleban insurgents beyond 2014, when security will be handed over to the Afghan National Army.

”There will be a continuing role for Special Forces until transition is complete,” she said.

Gillard, who visited troops in Afghanistan on her way to talks in India last week, said Australian soldiers remained in good spirits.

”They are very determined to see the mission that we have set ourselves through, a mission with a defined strategy and a defined end point,” she said.


Previous losses in 2012

August 30: Two soldiers from the 2nd Commando Regiment aboard a helicopter are killed as it attempts to land in Helmand province.

August 29: Three Australian soldiers are killed when a person in an Afghan National Army uniform opens fire inside a patrol base 20km north of Tarin Kowt in Uruzgan province.

July 1: An SAS soldier is shot in the chest during a fight with insurgents in the Chora Valley in Uruzgan.

- AAP

By Greg Ansley Email Greg