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Suicide bombs hit NATO force in Kabul, killing German soldier, Afghan boy

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From Google News and Ireland ONLINE

Kabul suicide car bomb kills Nato peacekeeper
14/11/2005 - 12:15:44

A suicide attacker rammed a car laden with explosives into a convoy of Nato-led peacekeepers in the Afghan capital Kabul today, killing at least one Nato soldier and wounding two other troops and six Afghans.

A local police commander, Pashtun, who uses only one name and was at the scene of the blast, said the soldiers were German, though this could not immediately be confirmed.

A reporter said he saw the body of the dead soldier lying on the ground under a Mercedes four-wheel-drive military vehicle that bore the brunt of the blast. Troops carried a wounded soldier on a stretcher to an ambulance.

The blast occurred on a main road in front the headquarters of organisers of last September's legislative elections. Dozens of International Security Assistance Force soldiers had cordoned off the area.

Bits of the Toyota Corolla that the attacker used were strewn across the road.

Pashtun said one ISAF soldier was killed and two others wounded. He said two Afghan police and four civilians were also wounded.

ISAF spokesman Capt. Michele Chortese confirmed the car bombing and said there had been "some casualties." He said wounded ISAF soldiers had been taken to hospital.

ISAF has about 12,000 soldiers from 36 nations in Afghanistan and is responsible for security in Kabul as well as northern and western regions. A separate 20,000-strong US-led coalition is in volatile eastern and southern parts.

Violence has increased recently as Taliban-led rebels have stepped up attacks to undermine President Hamid Karzai's US-backed government. Almost 1,500 people have been killed this year, the deadliest since the Taliban's ousting in 2001.

Militants have used seven suicide bombings in the past two months. The deadliest was outside an army training centre in Kabul and killed nine people.
 
From BBC

Twin bombings kill three in Kabul 

International troops helped Afghan police secure the area
At least three people have been killed in two suspected suicide car bomb attacks in the Afghan capital, Kabul.
A German soldier serving with Nato-led peacekeepers died in the first, as did a suspected suicide bomber, police said. At least one Afghan also died.

A second bomb an hour later on the same stretch of road reportedly targeted Greek soldiers. Nato says its troops then foiled an attempted third attack.

2005 had already seen several suicide attacks in Afghanistan, two in Kabul.

QUICK GUIDE


Afghanistan


A man claiming to speak for the ousted Taleban said they carried out Monday's attacks. The Taleban claimed the most recent suicide bombing in Kabul, in September.

The BBC's Andrew North in Kabul says suicide bombings have been rare in Afghanistan compared to Iraq, but the nature of the latest attacks is bound to cause heightened concern.

'Suicide acts'

Monday's attacks came on the busy main road between Kabul and the eastern city of Jalalabad.

 

"Both of the incidents were suicide acts," Gen Mahboub Amiri, chief of Kabul's rapid reaction police force, told Reuters.

The first was just before 1500 local time.

Police say the bomber drove his Toyota Corolla car into International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) vehicles as they travelled on the road leading from the capital.

The route is frequently used by soldiers of the international peacekeeping force and by US-led coalition troops and there are a number of military bases on the road.

Germany's acting foreign minister, Joschka Fischer, confirmed the death of the German soldier.

"I am appalled and deeply shocked over today's attack in Kabul," he said.

Several other people were injured, but casualty figures are still unclear.

'Exchange of fire'

Our correspondent said the road outside the main election compound where the first attack happened was strewn with vehicle parts.

SUICIDE ATTACKS
September 2005 - 12 killed outside Afghan army base in Kabul
May 2005 - 3 killed in Kabul internet cafe
June 2005 - 20 killed in Kandahar mosque
October 2004 - 3 killed in Kabul shopping centre
August 2004 - 10 US security contractors killed in Kabul


Afghan security challenges
Al-Qaeda imports Iraq tactics 

Emergency vehicles were swiftly at the scene. British soldiers cordoned off the blast site.

Smoke could be seen rising from the site of the second attack about 100 metres away and flames from burning vehicles lit up the sky as night fell.

Then, minutes after the second attack, a vehicle was driven at speed towards Nato-led troops. Witnesses said there was an exchange of fire and the soldiers forced it to stop but without an explosion.

A spokesman for the Nato-led force said they believed they had killed a suspected attacker, but there are also reports of civilians being injured as a result of the incident.

More than 1,400 people have been killed in violence linked to militants in Afghanistan this year - the worst violence the country has seen since US-led forces ousted the Taleban in late 2001.

Most of the violence has been in the south and east - not in Kabul, where the peacekeepers are stationed.

 
RIP my two German Brothers... and let the ones behind this cowardly act burn in hell for all eternity!
 
KABUL (CP) - Suicide bombers crashed cars filled with explosives into NATO vehicles in two separate attacks in the Afghan capital on Monday, highlighting the dangers in a country where Canada will be playing a bigger military role next year.


http://news.sympatico.msn.ca/World/ContentPosting.aspx?feedname=CP-WORLD&newsitemid=19718017



 
Just to clarify only one German soldier was killed, he only had 2 weeks left in his tour, RIP...

What is most troubling about yesterday is the Iraq-style tactics used, with multiple, coordinated attacks. The Greeks were also ambushed just slightly north of the city, and without getting into details, it was more than just someone taking potshots at them.

Here's some advice from the coal face: if someone hits you in traffic DON'T F'ING STOP!!!, forget those "you have been involved in an accident with an ISAF vehicle" papers and clear the area...
 
Mike_R23A said:
if someone hits you in traffic DON'T F'ING STOP!!!, forget those "you have been involved in an accident with an ISAF vehicle" papers and clear the area...

I'll make sure to pass this on.


RIP troop.
 
More info has now been made public, unfortunately the death toll has risen to 8, and once again it is the local populace who suffer most from these attacks.

http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2005/11/15/aghanistant-nato-blasts-051115.html

Death toll rises to 8 in Kabul blasts
Last Updated Tue, 15 Nov 2005 05:48:54 EST
CBC News

The death toll from double suicide bombings in Kabul rose to eight Tuesday as Afghan police blamed al-Qaeda for the attacks.

Police found six more burned bodies in a ditch near the scene of one of Monday's twin attacks, targeted against NATO peacekeepers. They appear to be the bodies of Afghans, said police.

A German peacekeeper died in the first bombing, while an Afghan child was killed in the second. The two suicide bombers also died.


FROM NOV. 15, 2005: Suicide blast kills three in Kabul

Police commander Gen. Mohammed Akbar told Associated Press on Tuesday that the bodies of the bombers were Arabs, and that only al-Qaeda has the means to carry out the attacks.

Hours after the attacks on Monday, a claim of responsibility came from a purported Taliban spokesperson. A U.S.-led military campaign ousted Afghanistan's former hardline government in 2001.

There have been fears that the remnants of the Taliban are working with al-Qaeda, the group led by Osama bin Laden.

None of the 700 Canadian troops currently in Kabul were injured in the blasts.

About 250 more Canadians are stationed in the southern city of Kandahar, where the bulk of Canadian operations are being shifted. As many as 2,000 Canadian soldiers will be in Kandahar by February 2006.


Copyright ©2005 Canadian Broadcasting Corporation - All Rights Reserved

I emailed CBC about the error in the Canadian troop numbers in Kabul, and in using the term "peacekeeper" for this mission...
 
Mike_R23A said:
More info has now been made public, unfortunately the death toll has risen to 8, and once again it is the local populace who suffer most from these attacks.

http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2005/11/15/aghanistant-nato-blasts-051115.html


I emailed CBC about the error in the Canadian troop numbers in Kabul, and in using the term "peacekeeper" for this mission...

Why would you email CBC?????? I am not really sure that we need to let everyone know what our exact dispositions are overseas. And from one of your previouse threads, you mentioned that it was troubling that the attacks were similar to the attacks in Iraq. It's not really that troubling other than the fact that our soldiers are now at threat and being threatened. Mind you, we have been threatened since day 1 of our deployment over there.  Just so you know, Terrorists rely on the same system as we do when talking about lessons learned. They will pass word around the world as to what worked and what doesn't. If one doesn't think that, they are very naivie to say the least.

[edited out stuff treading close to OPSEC]
 
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