The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US general wounded in Afghan insider attack

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KABUL: A US general was shot and wounded in a Taliban-claimed attack on a high-level security meeting last week that killed a powerful Afghan police chief, Nato’s mission in Afghanista­n said yesterday.

Brigadier General Jeffrey Smiley was among 13 wounded when a gunman wearing an Afghan security forces uniform opened fire on the gathering that included General Scott Miller — the top US and Nato commander in Afghanista­n — in the southern city of Kandahar.

Miller was unhurt in the shooting inside the heavily fortified Kandahar provincial governor’s compound that Nato’s Resolute Support described as an “Afghan-onAfghan incident”.

General Abdul Raziq, an antiTaliba­n strongman credited with keeping a lid on the insurgency in the south, was killed along with the provincial intelligen­ce chief and an Afghan journalist.

The Taliban claimed responsibi­lity for the brazen attack, saying Miller and Raziq were the targets. But American officials denied the US general was a target.

Smiley suffered non-life threatenin­g gunshot wounds and was “in Germany receiving further treatment”, Resolute Support confirmed.

Smiley arrived in Afghanista­n in August to head a Resolute Support mission called “Train, Advise, Assist and Command - South” based in Kandahar.

That the Taliban could mount a deadly insider assault in such a secure location has rattled Afghanista­n, a country long used to high-profile targeted killings and violence.

It was also an unusual incident for the US military, whose generals seldom face attack and are rarely wounded.

Parliament­ary elections held across Afghanista­n over the weekend were postponed in Kandahar for at least a week.

The shooting was seen as a major coup for the insurgents and threatens to torpedo peace talks and destabilis­e the south, which is the Taliban’s birthplace.

The Taliban, which controls or contests swathes of the war-torn country, has made significan­t territoria­l gains and threatened provincial capitals in recent months.

The increased aggression had been seen as an attempt by the group to strengthen its negotiatin­g position in talks with the United States to end the 17-year war. — AFP

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