Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Taliban kill 10 after reported U.S. attack on Afghan civilians

- By Rahim Faiez and Robert Burns

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Taliban insurgents staged a coordinate­d attack targeting a security firm in the Afghan capital on Wednesday, killing at least 10 people and wounding 19 others, as the U.S. said an airstrike hours earlier in Helmand province that reportedly killed civilians was conducted by American aircraft.

Wednesday’s attack in eastern Kabul took place when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives and other insurgents started a gunbattle with security forces in the area, Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danish said.

The assault came hours after provincial officials said at least 30 civilians were killed along with 16 Taliban fighters during the overnight battle between Afghan government forces and insurgents in southern Helmand province.

A local official, Attahullah Afghan, said most of the civilian casualties came when an airstrike struck a house in the central Helmand River valley, a Taliban heartland. U.S. officials said it happened in Helmand’s Garmsir district.

A U.S. military spokesman in Kabul said the airstrike was carried out by American aircraft called in to back Afghan “special security forces” after they came under heavy Taliban fire.

Maj. Bariki Mallya, the spokesman, said in an email exchange that the airstrike was conducted in self-defense after Taliban fighters armed with rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machine guns retreated into a compound and continued firing on Afghan government forces and their American advisers.

“In self-defense, the ground force called an airstrike,” Mallya said. “After the strike, there were secondary explosions, we assess from explosives inside the compound. At the time of the strike, the ground force was unaware of any civilians in or around the compound; they only knew that the Taliban were using the building as a fighting position.”

Mallya declined to say what the U.S. knew about civilian casualties or whether the incident was under U.S. investigat­ion. In a prepared statement, he said the U.S. investigat­es every “credible allegation of error and reviews every mission to learn, adapt and improve.”

A statement from the governor’s office in Helmand confirmed that 16 Taliban insurgents were killed and said that an investigat­ion was underway to determine the number of civilian casualties.

It said the militants had stockpiled ammunition in the area of the operation, which could have caused civilian casualties. There was also a car packed with explosives that ignited during the strike, the statement added.

Abdul Wadod Popul, a lawmaker from Helmand, also confirmed the civilian casualties. “The area is under Taliban’s control and is very difficult to get a precise number of casualties,” he said in Kabul.

The Taliban, who in recent years have taken over nearly half of Afghanista­n, claimed the attack Wednesday in Kabul.

Kabul police spokesman Basir Mujahid said the target of the attack was a security firm called G4S. The website of a multinatio­nal security company named G4S has London contact informatio­n.

The Taliban view the U.S.-backed government in Kabul as a dysfunctio­nal Western puppet and have refused offers to negotiate with it.

Also Wednesday, the Pentagon released the names of three U.S. servicemen killed Tuesday by a roadside bomb in Afghanista­n’s Ghazni province, the deadliest attack against U.S. forces in the country this year.

They are Army Capt. Andrew Patrick Ross, age 29, of Lexington, Va.; Army Sgt. 1st Class Eric Michael Emond, age 39, of Brush Prairie, Wash.; and Air Force Staff Sgt. Dylan J. Elchin, age 25, of Hookstown, Pa.

Ross and Emond were assigned to 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, based at Fort Bragg, N.C. Elchin was assigned to the 26th Special Tactics Squadron, based at Cannon Air Force Base, N.M.

 ?? RAHMAT GUL/AP ?? Afghan boys looks through a broken window of a shop after a bomb attack Wednesday in Kabul, the capital.
RAHMAT GUL/AP Afghan boys looks through a broken window of a shop after a bomb attack Wednesday in Kabul, the capital.

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