USA TODAY US Edition

Afghans blame Haqqani for attacks

Gunmen fire at U.S. Embassy in Kabul; 36 attackers killed

- By Tom A. Peter Special for USA TODAY

KABUL — A complex terrorist attack that was beaten down Monday after paralyzing Kabul has raised fears among some Afghans that the country’s forces are not ready to stand up to insurgents.

“Not just me, but the entire nation is worried about the future,” said Ali Ahmad, whose refrigerat­or repair shop is next door to a building that was taken over by terrorists Sunday. “The foreigners are responsibl­e for this. They have the latest technology. We Afghans have nothing.”

Afghan Interior Minister Besmillah Mohammadi said Monday that the assault was the work of the Haqqani network, a terrorist group with close ties to the Taliban that the Pentagon says gets help from Pakistan’s intelligen­ce agency. The network has stronghold­s in provinces along the Pakistan border, which the U.S. military has said will be the target of ramped up offensives this year.

“One of the terrorists who has been arrested in Jalalabad has confessed that they were trained and equipped outside of our borders,” Mohammadi said. “He has confessed that they were in one of the branches of the Haqqani network. We have his confession.”

The attack involved dozens of gunmen who took up positions in central Kabul and three other provinces Sunday. In Kabul, the attackers fired at the U.S. Embassy and other buildings for 18 hours before Afghan troops wiped out the last pocket of attackers with the help of NATO gunships Monday.

Thirty-six of the attackers were killed as were 11 others that included civilians and police, according to the Interior Ministry. President Hamid Karzai praised the performanc­e of the Afghan military but complained that NATO and Afghan intelligen­ce should have prevented the attack.

Some said the attackers failed to achieve their aim.

“Their only goal was to show how powerful they are in Afghanista­n, but in terms of trying to harm the Afghan forces, it just looked like a drama to me — to lose 36 suicide attackers and only cause very low casualties to the security personnel,” says Saleh Mo-

“The foreigners are responsibl­e for this. They have the latest technology. We Afghans have nothing.”

hammad Saleh, a member of parliament from Kunar.

U.S. forces are at the lead of fighting in outlying provinces to root out Taliban influence, while security in Kabul is headed by the Afghan National Army and police. The heavily armed insurgents were able to penetrate Kabul’s numerous security checkpoint­s leading into some of the city’s most secure areas where government agencies are located.

Kabul has seen several spectacula­r attacks over the past year, such as the assaults on the U.S. Embassy in September and the Interconti­nental Hotel in June. Retired admiral Michael Mullen, who was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, blamed those attacks on the Haqqanis as well.

Ali Ahmad, Kabul resident

An ally of al-qaeda, the Haqqani network was described by Mullen as a “veritable arm” of the Pakistani InterServi­ces Intelligen­ce, which was suspected of shielding Osama bin Laden before he was killed in May by U.S. special operations forces at his hideout in a home in Pakistan.

Apart from Kabul, the eastern capitals of Paktia, Logar and Nangarhar provinces also came under attack Sunday as suicide bombers tried to storm a NATO base, an airport and police installati­ons.

Abdul Rahman Mangal, deputy governor of Paktia province, said local intelligen­ce agents blamed Haqqani for the attack in Gardez, the provincial capital.

“There’s nobody else who could have done it,” Mangal said.

Gen. Ghulam Sakhi Roogh Lawanay, police chief in Logar province, said investigat­ors there also were convinced that the Haqqani network orchestrat­ed the attack.

“We found mobile phones and documents, and the telephone numbers showed that there was contact between a remote area in Afghanista­n and the Pakistani side of the border,” he said. “The Haqqani network was behind the attack.”

U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker told CNN that such attacks demonstrat­e the need for U.S. troops to remain in Afghanista­n until the Afghan military and police are fully prepared to prevent a takeover by insurgents hostile to America.

“To get out before the Afghans have a full grip on security, which is a couple of years out, would be to invite the Taliban, Haqqani and al-qaeda back in and set the stage for another 9/11. And that, I think, is an unacceptab­le risk for any American,” Crocker said.

 ?? By Massoud Hossaini, Afp/getty Images ?? Attack repelled: Afghan police and officials stand next to the wreckage of a car used in a suicide attack in front of a building from which insurgents launched an attack in Kabul on Monday.
By Massoud Hossaini, Afp/getty Images Attack repelled: Afghan police and officials stand next to the wreckage of a car used in a suicide attack in front of a building from which insurgents launched an attack in Kabul on Monday.

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