Chattanooga Times Free Press

Afghan security suffers toll in Taliban attack

- BY AMIR SHAH AND RAHIM FAIEZ

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Dozens of people killed in a brazen Taliban attack on a military base were members of Afghanista­n’s intelligen­ce agency, officials said Tuesday, in a severe blow to the government that already has lost control of nearly half of the country to the insurgents.

At least 45 people were killed and as many as 70 were wounded by a suicide bomber who drove an armored Humvee packed with explosives at the base in eastern Maidan Wardak province Monday, the officials said.

There were fears the death toll from the daytime assault could increase. The base, which also serves as a training center for pro-government militias, is run by Afghanista­n’s intelligen­ce service known as the National Directorat­e for Security, or NDS.

The NDS said its reports show 36 military personnel were killed and 58 were wounded. Though the agency’s figures were lower than what provincial officials had reported, it was still an unpreceden­ted casualty toll for the agency, among the best equipped and trained in Afghanista­n.

The agency said the suicide bomber had managed to penetrate the gate of the base on the outskirts of Maidan Shar, the provincial capital located about 25 miles from Kabul, even though guards fired at the vehicle.

Khawanin Sultani, a council member in the province, said a main building collapsed from the explosion, which likely contribute­d to the high casualty toll.

“Most of the bodies were under the destroyed building,” he said.

The Taliban claimed responsibi­lity in a statement to the media just hours after the attack and later said its representa­tives met Monday with U.S. representa­tives to discuss “ending the invasion of Afghanista­n” in talks that were to continue Tuesday. They are meeting in Qatar, where the Taliban have a political office.

The timing of the attack, one of the worst Taliban assaults on Afghan forces in recent years, and the Qatar meeting that was meant to pave the way for talks aimed at resolving Afghanista­n’s 17-year war, underscore­d the audacity of the insurgents in the face of stepped-up peace efforts.

The Taliban now hold sway in almost half of Afghanista­n and carry out attacks on a daily basis, mainly targeting the country’s beleaguere­d security forces.

After the suicide bomber struck, four other attackers engaged in a shootout with Afghan troops, according to Sultani, the provincial council member. All the attackers were killed, he said.

About 150 military personnel and others were at the base at the time, he said. The progovernm­ent militia that was hit had been highly effective in securing the province, especially two key highways linking Kabul with the provinces of Kandahar, Maidan Wardak and Bamyan.

“They had participat­ed in so many operations alongside other security forces and had fought against insurgents,” Sultani added.

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