Defence Secretary Philip Hammond is facing calls to make a statement to MPs on Nato's decision to scale down joint patrols with Afghan forces.
Two British soldiers were killed at the weekend, in one of a series of attacks by "rogue" Afghan troops.
Nato's change of strategy comes a day after Mr Hammond insisted such attacks would not "derail" its operations.
Labour MP Denis MacShane urged Mr Hammond to make a second statement, updating the Commons on the situation.
Sergeant Gareth Thursby and Private Thomas Wroe, both of 3rd Battalion, The Yorkshire Regiment, were shot dead on Saturday by a rogue Afghan soldier who turned on them after faking injury.
'Raw pain'A fifth of UK soldiers killed this year in Afghanistan were victims not of insurgents, but of Afghan soldiers or police. Such incidents, known as "green-on-blue" attacks, have increased concern over the safety of military personnel.
In the Commons on Monday, Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said: "We cannot and will not allow the strategy to be derailed... The pain felt is all the more raw when the incident undermines the trust that our armed forces have built in Afghanistan."
Nato has since announced that joint operations carried out by its own and Afghan troops will be restricted.
They will only routinely happen at battalion level or above, with smaller patrols being signed off on a case-by-case basis.
Mr Hammond's statement on Monday came in response to an urgent question from Labour MP Denis MacShane, who told the BBC he was seeking permission from Speaker John Bercow to ask another.
He said: "In essence the the Americans are saying 'It's over. It's drawdown time and pretty soon we'll be out like we got out of Vietnam, like we got out of other colonial wars.'
"Yesterday I did ask an urgent question of Mr Hammond. He came to the Commons about these deaths and he didn't mention this at all.
"Either he knew about it and was hiding it, which I don't think is the case, or frankly the Americans aren't even bothering to tell their biggest ally."
Mr MacShane and former Conservative cabinet minister John Redwood have been among those calling for a speedy return of troops.
But one of the main justifications for troops being in Afghanistan is the training of Afghan security forces to handle the situation once UK forces withdraw in 2014.
Foreign Secretary William Hague is also expected to be questioned about the security situation in Afghanistan when he faces the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee at 10:15 BST.
18 Sep, 2012
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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-19633055#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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