Bangkok Post

Two Nato troops shot dead at base

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KABUL: Two men wearing Afghan security force uniforms opened fire yesterday inside a military base in southern Afghanista­n, killing two Nato service members before being shot dead themselves, the internatio­nal force said.

Nato offered few details about the shooting in Afghanista­n’s southern Helmand province, which appeared to be the latest so-called “insider attack” to target foreign service members or contractor­s in the country. Afghan officials said they had no immediate details about the attack.

In a statement, Nato said the two men in Afghan uniforms opened fire on a vehicle with internatio­nal troops inside it. Both shooters were killed when Nato forces returned fire, it said.

Nato did not elaborate, nor did it identify the nationalit­ies of the internatio­nal soldiers killed nor the base the attack took place. It said the attackers wore “Afghan National Defence and Security Forces uniforms” that include the country’s police, military and border patrol.

The motive for the attack was not immediatel­y known and no group admitted responsibi­lity for the assault. In past attacks, Taliban insurgents have been known to wear Afghan police or military uniforms to stage attacks on the internatio­nal service personnel. Others have opened fire apparently on their own accord, including an Afghan soldier who last year killed Maj Gen Harold J Greene, the highest-ranked US officer to be slain in combat since 1970 in the Vietnam War.

The shooting is the third “insider attack” on foreign forces this year. In January, three US civilian contractor­s were shot dead at Kabul airport by an Afghan soldier who was also killed. In April, a US soldier was killed by an Afghan soldier inside the compound of the governor of eastern Nangarhar province’s city of Jalalabad.

Meanwhile yesterday, Afghan forces were at risk of being overrun after hundreds of insurgents launched a mass attack days earlier on a district headquarte­rs in Helmand province’s Musa Qala district, said Karim Atal, the head of Helmand’s provincial council. Mr Atal said the central government had yet to send reinforcem­ents.

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