May 22, 2013

U.S.: Embassy attack a propaganda win for militants

8e2bdba82f0b4efa2ab95150861cce1d U.S.: Embassy attack a propaganda win for militants

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – have blamed the bold attack on the U.S. Embassy on a Pakistan-based group allied with the Taliban, acknowledging that the assault brought a propaganda victory for the even as they played down its military significance.

The attack underscored holes in Afghan security: Six fighters with heavy weapons took over an unfinished high-rise that authorities knew was a perfect roost for an attack on the embassy and NATO headquarters about 300 meters (yards) away. They then held out against a 20-hour by hundreds of Afghan and foreign forces.

It appeared likely that either had been stored in the 12-story building ahead of time or that some insurgents had entered in advance with a supply of guns and ammunition.

By the time the fighting ended at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, the insurgents had killed 16 Afghans — five police officers and 11 civilians, more than half of them children. Six or seven rockets hit inside the , but no embassy or NATO staff members were hurt. All 11 attackers — including four who targeted police buildings elsewhere in the city — were killed, authorities said.

Police could be seen clapping their hands in celebration on the roof of the high-rise. Others carried the mangled bodies of insurgents down flights of rough concrete stairs and piled them into the back of a waiting ambulance.

Although the Taliban claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s assault, U.S. and Afghan officials said the Haqqani network likely carried it out on their behalf. The Haqqanis have emerged as one of the biggest threats to Afghanistan’s stability, working from lawless areas across the border in Pakistan’s tribal region.

Nearly all Taliban attacks in and around the have been executed by the Haqqanis, who are also allied with al-Qaida. The Haqqani network was also blamed for a weekend truck bombing in eastern province that wounded 77 U.S. soldiers.

“It’s tough when you’re trying to fight an insurgency that has a lot of support outside the national borders,” U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker said. “It’s complicated, it’s difficult but clearly for a long-term solution those safe havens have to be reduced.”

U.S. officials have been pressing Pakistan to go after Haqqani militants. But relations with Islamabad have not been good, particularly after the U.S. raid in May that killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

Crocker said Tuesday’s attack would not affect the transfer of security responsibilities from the U.S.-led military coalition to the Afghan security forces. Foreign forces are to completely withdraw combat troops by the end of 2014.

U.S. Marine Corps Gen. John Allen, the top commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, said the assault did not mean that Afghan security forces weren’t doing their job, arguing that potential attacks are thwarted in Kabul nearly every day. However, he did allow that the violent standoff gave the Taliban the headlines they wanted.

“I’ll grant that they did get an IO (Information Operations) win,” Allen told reporters in the capital.

NATO’s senior civilian representative, Simon Gass, called the attack “extremely frightening even for the citizens of Kabul.”

Both men argued that the insurgents depend on these spectacular attacks because they can’t take and hold ground.

“This really is not a very big deal,” Crocker said. “If that’s the best they can do, you know, I think it’s actually a statement of their weakness.”

But in Kabul, the fear expressed by some residents showed the effectiveness of the current militant campaign. This week’s attack was the third major insurgent assault in the capital since late June.

Ghulam , 36, who works in a government office, said he doesn’t trust the government or the security forces to keep him safe.

“It’s true that the security forces were able to defeat attackers and prevent more casualties, but why couldn’t they keep them from entering the city? Basically they are unable to stop them, or the insurgents have people helping them,” Sadeq said. “There are so many Taliban fighters among the police and army ranks. They can very easily implement plans and launch attacks.”

This fear and uncertainty is what analysts say the insurgents are after.

“The Taliban themselves would admit that they are militarily weak in places like Kabul, but their ability to penetrate a place that is the height of security like Kabul is, for them, a win,” said Candace Rondeaux, an Afghanistan analyst with International Crisis Group. An attack like this shows that they can get past checkpoints, coordinate planning and pull on connections within the city, Rondeaux said.

There were six police officers assigned to guard the building, specifically because officials had recognized it as a potential platform for an assault, said Wahidullah Ahmad, a policeman who was overseeing the scene after the attack. He said he did not know if any of those guards were among those killed.

Authorities released new details Wednesday about how the attack unfolded.

At about 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, police manning a checkpoint at a stopped a minivan filled with what appeared to be women wearing burqas. Suddenly there were explosions, likely either suicide blasts or grenades.

The minivan sped across the circle to the site of the half-built high-rise and quickly set up a firing post from which the militants started to launch rockets and shoot heavy weaponry toward the U.S. Embassy and NATO forces headquarters.

U.S. and NATO officials praised the Afghan forces for routing the enemy, but international troops clearly played a major role.

photos show foreign forces inside the building throughout the clearing operation, apparently directing Afghan police alongside them and passing information to helicopters overhead.

It fell upon the helicopter gunships to take out three of the last four insurgent holdouts, said Shafiqullah Ibrahim, an Afghan police inspector.

Afghan police: Kabul attack over, assailants dead

7157d02f3f4108101578dd9919adc0a6 Afghan police: Kabul attack over, assailants dead
Musadeq ,
An Afghan fires on a building which is occupied by Taliban during a coordinated assault in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2011. Taliban fired rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles at the U.S. Embassy, and other buildings in the heart of the Afghan capital Tuesday while suicide bombers struck police buildings. The U.S. Embassy and NATO reported no casualties.

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – The 20-hour insurgent attack in the heart of Kabul ended after a final volley of helicopter gunfire as Afghan police ferreted out and killed the last few assailants who had taken over a half-built downtown building to fire on nearby U.S. Embassy and NATO compounds.

At least six Afghans — four police officers and two civilians — died across the city in the coordinated attack that started Tuesday, the Kabul police department said. By Wednesday morning, all assailants, including at least six in the building close to the U.S. embassy, were dead.

“The terrorist attack in Kabul is over,” the Interior Ministry said in a statement.

PHOTOS: Shootout in Kabul, Afghanistan

The assault, which included attempted in different parts of Kabul, raised fresh doubts about the Afghans’ ability to secure their nation as U.S. and other foreign troops begin to withdraw. No NATO or U.S. Embassy employees were hurt in the attack.

Two or three of the assailants had held out overnight in the unfinished, 11-story high-rise at a major in the capital, but were killed in the final morning assault by Afghan forces, said Hashmat Stanekzai, a spokesman for the Kabul .

In all, six had occupied the building, Stanekzai said.

NATO helicopters fired down on the building throughout the night and into the morning but ground forces were all Afghan police, said Abdul Rahman Rahman, the deputy interior minister.

After the fighting ended, Afghan police standing on the roof of the building could be seen clapping in celebration. On the ground, police officers shouted “Allah Akbar!” — the Arabic phrase meaning “God is Great.”

“Conditions in Kabul city are back to normal and all our countrymen can go about their daily lives without any worries,” the Interior Ministry said.

The sophisticated attack was the first time insurgents have organized such a complex assault against multiple targets in separate parts of the Afghan capital. The militants’ seeming ability to strike at will in the most heavily defended part of Kabul also suggested that they may have had help from rogue elements in the Afghan security forces.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack. But Kabul’s deputy police chief said he thought an affiliated organization, the Haqqani network, had carried it out on behalf of the Islamist extremist group.

According to Afghan and other officials, the attack began after midday Tuesday when a car packed with insurgents was stopped at a checkpoint at Abdul Haq square, about 300 yards (meters) from the U.S. Embassy. Some of the militants apparently detonated suicide vests as they left the car. Others could be seen entering the partially constructed high-rise, which they used as a base for their attack.

Gunfire and explosions shook the neighborhood for hours as insurgents fired rockets from the building.

At the same time, there was a barrage of explosions around the Wazir Akbar Khan area, which is also near the U.S. Embassy and home to a number of other foreign missions.

It appeared likely that either had been stored inside the empty, unfinished building ahead of time or that some insurgents had entered in advance with a supply of guns and ammunition.

It was unclear how much weaponry the insurgents had.

An eyewitness said they were equipped with heavy machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and possibly a mortar. The insurgents also had an 82 mm recoilless rifle, a powerful weapon that usually fires shells designed to destroy tanks — a large weapon, heavy and difficult to carry.

Police later found a Toyota Townace minivan in the building’s underground parking lot that had been rigged with explosives that was likely used to bring in the weaponry and ammunition, Stanekzai said. Police also found burqas — the body and face-covering robe worn by many Afghan women in public — inside the van. Police said the attackers likely used them as disguises to get past police checkpoints.

An Associated Press reporter let into the building after the fighting ended saw the bodies of two of the attackers — young men with beards wearing traditional tunics and cotton pants — near a stairwell leading up to the eighth floor.

Bullet holes could be seen on nearly every floor of the concrete structure. Near the top of the building on the 10th floor, four more bloodied bodies could be seen in a room with an open view of the U.S. Embassy and NATO compounds, as well as nearby Afghan government buildings.

A number of empty water bottles were strewn around the room, along with a bag of dried fruit.

Earlier Tuesday, three other insurgents had attempted to carry out suicide attacks across Kabul and all were killed. One was shot on the road leading from the capital to the airport, and the two others when they tried to attack Afghan police buildings in western Kabul, across the city from the embassy. A police officer was killed in one of these attacks.

Afghan police Gen. Daoud Amin, deputy police chief of Kabul, said the Haqqani insurgent network was likely behind the attack. The Haqqani network is a Pakistan-based group affiliated with both the Taliban and al-Qaida. It has emerged as one of the biggest threats to stability in Afghanistan.

The violence carries an unsettling message to Western leaders and their Afghan allies about the resilience and reach of the Taliban and related organizations. It is also an indication the militants may not be interested in pursuing peace talks with President Hamid Karzai’s government or the United States.

U.S. and Afghan officials maintained that the attack and others like it would not slow the plan to withdraw U.S. troops from the country by the end of 2014. President Barack Obama has ordered the withdrawal of 33,000 troops by the end of next summer, and some of America’s international partners are making plans to remove some of their forces. There are now about 131,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan, with 90,000 from the United States.

The expansion of the Afghan army and police is critical to NATO’s exit strategy. Earlier this summer, the alliance handed over responsibility for security in seven areas, including two provinces. But violence has increased in some of those places.

The U.S. hopes to have 325,000 Afghan army and police in the field by the end of 2014. But the Afghan forces have been plagued by desertions. And on Tuesday, the Pentagon announced it will try to cut the multibillion dollar cost of training the forces.