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Taliban attack U.S. aid company, five killed
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Security developments in Afghanistan
7:26am EDT
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Afghan policemen and soldiers stand next to a building which was attacked by Taliban insurgents in Kunduz July 2, 2010. Taliban suicide bombers and gunmen stormed a U.S. contracting company office in northern Afghanistan on Friday, killing five people including three foreigners and wounding 24 others, a senior official said.
Credit: Reuters/Stringe
By Mohammad Hamed
KUNDUZ |
Fri Jul 2, 2010 10:20am EDT
KUNDUZ Afghanistan (Reuters) - Taliban suicide bombers and gunmen stormed a U.S. contracting company office in northern Afghanistan Friday, killing five people including three foreigners and wounding 24 others, a senior official said.
The pre-dawn attack happened in relatively peaceful Kunduz province when insurgents attacked the newly opened offices of Development Alternatives Inc. (DAI), provincial governor Mohammad Omar told Reuters.
In a statement, President Hamid Karzai said the raid was the work of "foreign paymasters" -- a veiled reference to Pakistan and the links Afghanistan says Islamabad has with the Taliban.
One British citizen was killed during the fierce five-hour gunbattle that ensued, along with a German national and a Filipino, while two Afghans also died, Omar said.
"Our security forces managed to rescue around eight American workers inside the compound," he said.
The latest attack comes as newly-appointed U.S. and NATO forces commander General David Petraeus was due to arrive in the country to oversee the fight against the Taliban and try to reverse the insurgency's momentum.
Earlier, NATO said a western soldier died in a separate insurgent attack in eastern Afghanistan.
According to its website (www.dai.com), the company is one of USAID's principal service providers and specializes in post-conflict reconstruction, local government, agribusiness and natural resource management.
At least one of the bombers blew himself up in front of the gate to allow other fighters to push inside, triggering a fierce five-hour gunbattle with security guards and police who surrounded the building, Omar said.
BRAZEN ATTACKS
The raid in Kunduz follows a similar pattern of brazen attacks by insurgents elsewhere in the country, with Taliban fighters trying to seize government or foreign-linked buildings before going down with guns blazing and suicide vests.
Afghan police and security guards battled insurgents for most of the morning before the attackers were killed, Omar said. Foreign workers fled to the roof of the five-story building for safety as the battle continued in floors below.
International troops helped Afghan security forces ferry wounded civilians to a nearby military base for emergency care, a coalition military spokeswoman said in a statement.
A Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said at least six suicide bombers and fighters were involved in the attack in a province mainly patrolled by German forces under NATO-command.
Violence in Afghanistan is at its worst despite the presence of some 150,000 foreign and over 100,000 Afghan troops and police. More than 100 foreign troops died in Afghanistan last month, the deadliest since the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001.
Insurgents have managed to infiltrate remote villages and districts in the province as they seek to push their reach and influence beyond traditional strongholds in the south ahead of a looming "surge" offensive by U.S.-led coalition forces.
(Additional reporting by Hamid Shalizi in Kabul; Writing by Rob Taylor; Editing by Miral Fahmy)
World
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See All Comments (6) | Post Comment
Jul 02, 2010 3:04am EDT
We’ve really got things under control in Afghanistan. We should just bail out this hell hole and let its population live their 14th century life style cut off from the rest of the world.The country is not worth the lives being expended. Just totally isolate it. Fly over twice a year to spray the poppy fields and let them kill each other.
nativearizonan
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Jul 02, 2010 6:45am EDT
@nativearizonan
That’s exactly you’re there for: ”We should just bail out this hell hole and let its population live their 14th century life style cut off from the rest of the world.The country is not worth the lives being expended. Just totally isolate it. Fly over twice a year to spray the poppy fields and let them kill each other”
azmondeo
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Jul 02, 2010 6:50am EDT
We can chase Al Qaeda and the Taliban across the globe and thin out their network but we can’t eliminate them
STORYBURNcool
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Jul 02, 2010 6:56am EDT
@STORYBURNcool
Eliminating Al-Qaeda by the US and its allies is shooting itself in the foot. A suicide, at least at the moment.
azmondeo
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Jul 02, 2010 7:19am EDT
Taliban outlawed poppy cultivation while in power, but after Taliban’s expulsion in 2001, opium cultivation returned.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/10/14/60minutes/main946648.shtml
I think that gives Americanos and others a false explanation of the source behind Taliban’s ability to obtain weaponry and re-arm whenever needed. A dirty game and poor Afghan civilians.
azmondeo
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Jul 02, 2010 10:29am EDT
@ nativearizonan… Great suggestion!
Is that kind of like what you guys did in Vietnam? After spraying millions of gallons of Agent Orange the people of Vietnam continue to suffer even today!
The answer isn’t to kill everything and everybody when you don’t have the answers… The rest of the world is growing tired of your on-going wars and the lies that you use to perpetrate them… it seems all you guys keep doing is to make more enemies wherever you go?
Separate your diplomatic policies from those of the Pentagon and Im sure you’ll start seeing more positive results?
digitaldarkroom
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