KABUL, Afghanistan - A top Afghan army general was killed Thursday in a helicopter crash in western Afghanistan, and two British troops died in a blast in the country's south, officials said.
Gen. Fazaludin Sayar was one of the Afghan army's four regional commanders, in charge of the entire west of the country.
His Mi-17 helicopter hit bad weather in the morning and went down in the Adraskan district of Herat province, the ministry said in a statement. All 12 others aboard were also killed, the statement said. The helicopter had been headed to neighboring Farah province.
All of the bodies were brought to Herat, the provincial capital, said Rauf Ahmadi, a police spokesman.
A Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, claimed militants shot down the helicopter in a phone call to an AP reporter in southern Afghanistan.
But Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi denied the claim, saying the area of the crash has no insurgent activity.
The helicopter was flying low because of bad weather when it hit a mountain, Ahmadi said.
Following years of neglect, the Afghan army's aging helicopters are in bad shape.
Forbidding mountainous terrain, lack of roads coupled with insurgent attacks on ground convoys have forced local and international authorities to rely heavily on the use of helicopters and other aircraft for movement.
In the country's volatile south, two British troops were killed in a blast Wednesday, the British defense ministry said in a statement.
They died during an operation against insurgents near Geresh in Helmand Province, the statement said.
Southern Afghanistan is the center of the Taliban-led insurgency, where thousands more U.S. troops will join the fight later this year.
Saudi Arabia's intelligence chief met with top officials in Afghanistan on Wednesday, likely as part of a behind-the-scenes effort to smooth hostilities between the Afghan government and insurgents seeking to overthrow it.
Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz Al Saud met with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and other government leaders, an Afghan government statement said. He also met with opposition leader Burhanuddin Rabbani and other former jihadi leaders who fought against Soviet occupation but are now involved in the political process.
Muqrin was sent to Kabul by Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, the statement said, without disclosing the content of the talks.
Saudi Arabia is a leader of the Sunni Muslim world, and it was one of a handful of countries that recognized the strictly Islamic Taliban as rulers of Afghanistan in the 1990s.
As the security situation in Afghanistan deteriorates, Saudi Arabia has been attempting to play a low-profile role in bridging the differences between Karzai's government and some members of the insurgency.
More than 6,400 people -- mostly militants -- were killed in 2008, according to an Associated Press count of figures released by Afghan and Western officials.