June 20, 2013

Six Afghan police killed in insider attack, officials say

da449e1368509da342435dfacea14964 Six Afghan police killed in insider attack, officials say

() – Six Afghan were killed in Helmand province in a so-called “insider” attack involving a rogue Afghan policeman and a chef, local officials said on Saturday.

The Taliban took responsibility for the attack, saying they had despatched a “mujahid who had infiltrated and penetrated the police ranks”, spokesman Qari Yousuf said.

The policeman and chef working for the officers approached a in Helmand’s Grishk district on Friday where they opened fire and shot dead two of their colleagues, the ’s office said in a statement.

Insurgents then rushed to the scene, and killed four more policemen, the statement said.

Police officials added that the chef previously attempted to kill the officers by poisoning their food.

“First the cook poisoned his comrades and then he joined the Taliban and decided to shoot them instead,” said Farid Ahmad Farhang, a Helmand .

At least 52 -led force have been killed so far this year in , prompting NATO soldiers to be armed at all times and leading the Afghan security services to introduce stricter vetting procedures.

The majority of those attacks are not Taliban-related, NATO and U.S. officials have said, but stem rather from personal grievances.

Separately, two officials in Helmand’s Sangin district were ambushed and killed by insurgents as they drove car to a ’ meeting, the province governor’s office said.

(Reporting by Abdul and Mirwais Harooni; Writing by Amie Ferris-Rotman; Editing by Nick )

Afghan forces face threat from within, says official

3ed8737ef382449ebbdbd9efe75c8362 Afghan forces face threat from within, says official

(Reuters) – Afghanistan must act quickly to tackle infiltration of its security forces or another fatal attack on Western forces could undermine ties with NATO, a senior Afghan official said on Wednesday, in a rare admission of the threat within.

On Saturday, a U.S. and a major were shot at close range while working in an office in the heart of the Interior Ministry, one of the most closely-guarded buildings in Afghanistan.

A stunned NATO quickly withdrew all staff from ministries dotted around the following the attack which came after the burning of Korans in a triggered in parts of the country.

“We must make great efforts to prevent infiltration. This is a challenge for us,” the official, speaking on the condition that he not be identified because he did not have the authority, told Reuters.

“It’s a very serious matter.”

Afghan security officials believe Abdul Saboor, a officer, killed the Americans. He is at large.

The attack called into question NATO’s strategy of replacing big with teams of special advisors like the U.S. officers who were gunned down.

Their work is a key part of NATO’s training mission to create reliable Afghan security forces to take over before foreign combat troops leave by end-2014.

“If we don’t deal with infiltration then Afghanistan will suffer. We will lose credibility with NATO and the rest of the international community,” said the official.

According to the Pentagon, around 70 members of the were killed in 42 from May 2007 through January 2012.

These attacks have become more frequent as the United States has sent tens of thousands of more soldiers to Afghanistan as part of a surge to fight in Taliban strongholds.

Last month, French President Nicolas Sarkozy suspended training and and announced that France would withdraw entirely by the end of 2013 after four French troops were killed by a rogue Afghan soldier.

The Ministry of Defense official said the large size of the Afghan army and police — about 250,000 — made it difficult to stop infiltration.

Afghanistan hopes to create a force of about 350,000 and then trim some of it.

“Our intelligence agencies will have to work on tapping phones and monitoring people’s movements,” said the official. “The bigger the force gets the harder it will be to fight infiltration.”

Although the possibility of Taliban infiltration of Afghan forces is most worrying for U.S.-led NATO troops, the defense official expressed concerns that any type of incident could be harmful to strategic ties.

“Whether it is the Taliban or someone who is mentally ill we have to avoid it at any cost.”

(Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)