More New Zealand non-combat troops may be sent into Afghanistan now that increased insurgent activity has resulted in the deaths of five Kiwi soldiers this month.
Prime Minister John Key said the support may come from non-combat SAS forces who would assist with logistics and planning.
Lance Corporal Jacinda Baker, 26, Private Richard Harris, 21, and Corporal Luke Tamatea, 31, were killed instantly on Sunday evening (NZT) when their humvee, the last in a convoy, was struck by a 20 kilogram improvised explosive device (IED) on the road to Do Abe in the northeast of Bamiyan Province.
When questioned today about the use of humvee vehicles, Mr Key said: "No vehicle would have survived that explosion."
He described the blast as "massive".
Mr Key confirmed a specialist IED team had been sent to Afghanistan last week after the deaths of Lance Corporals Rory Malone and Pralli Durrer just over two weeks ago.
Chief of Defence Force Lieutenant General Rhys Jones described the insurgents responsible for the deaths of the five New Zealand soldiers as "proficient" and "aggressively trying to hunt us down".
He said the New Zealand Defence Force IED team would work to prevent the further assembly and supply of IEDs.
"It's likely that these IED had already been assembled two weeks ago when that first attack occurred," said General Jones.
Mr Key said New Zealand's Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) working in Afghanistan would return to New Zealand in either April or September next year. Cabinet would make a final decision in the next month.
"The Cabinet's preference is more around April - but it's really around the logistics of a number of things that are happening in terms of the way we work with our partners.
"I'm not 100 per cent sure I can publicly tell you the reason why - there is a reason why a later date is probably not possible, even if we wanted to stay longer.
Mr Key said the timing of the withdrawal from Afghanistan was also being negotiated with partnership countries.
"In terms of the argument of 'should we simply cut and run and leave this afternoon' - that is not sensible."
New Zealand has three bases in Afghanistan, as well as 145 troops and equipment which would make a swift exit difficult.
Ten New Zealand troops have now died in Afghanistan.
Lance Corporal Baker was a medic and was posted to Burnham Regional Support Company in April 2007.
She is the first female New Zealand soldier killed in action since nurse Lesley Estelle Cowper of the New Zealand Surgical Teams was killed in Vietnam in 1966.
Corporal Tamatea joined the army in 2000 - and was deployed to Timor- Leste, the Solomon Islands and Sumatra.
Private Harris joined the Army in 2009 and was previously deployed to Timor-Leste.
- By Kate Shuttleworth