80 die as suicide truck bomb hits Kabul diplomatic district

epa06000541 A man who was injured in a suicide bomb attack, reacts at the scene, in Kabul, Afghanistan, 31 May 2017. At least 50 people were killed or wounded in a suicide bomb attack near Kabul's diplomatic and government district on 31 May, media reported. The number of casualties is expected to rise, media added.  EPA/JAWAD JALALI

Bloomberg

A suicide truck bomb in Kabul killed as many as 80 people and wounded 350 on Wednesday morning near a diplomatic enclave in the worst attack on the Afghan capital in 10 months.
The explosion happened near the German embassy about 8:25 a.m. in the Wazir Akbar Khan area, a busy neighborhood that’s home to the presidential palace and many diplomatic missions, some of which were damaged in the attack. Women and children were among the dead and wounded, Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danish said by phone. The Taliban denied involvement and no other group so far has claimed responsibility.
The vehicle was stopped by Afghan forces from entering the secured Green Zone, home to government buildings and embassies, according to a statement from the NATO-led Resolute Support Mission. A Roshan Telecommunications office was also hit by the blast and more than 50 vehicles were destroyed or damaged, Danish said. Windows of nearby buildings and compounds were shattered and police cordoned off the district.
The death toll from the attack, which took place during the first week of the holy fasting month of Ramadan may increase as many of the wounded were in a critical condition, said Health Ministry spokesman Ismail Kawasi, who confirmed the casualty numbers.

No Peace
“We want peace but those who kill us in the holy month of Ramadan don’t,” Abdullah Abdullah, Afghanistan’s chief executive who shares power with President Ashraf Ghani, said in posts on Twitter. They must “be destroyed and uprooted.”
Security has continued to deteriorate in Afghanistan with the resurgent Taliban claiming more territory across the country and IS militants stepping up attacks. A US watchdog said last month that a record number of civilians died last year, 16 years after then-US President George W. Bush first sent special forces to the country after the Sept. 11 attacks to topple the Taliban regime which sheltered al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden.
“Today’s tragedy shows that the conflict in Afghanistan is not winding down but dangerously widening, in a way that should alarm the international community,” Horia Mosadiq, an Afghanistan researcher with Amnesty International, said in a statement. “Afghan civilians continue to pay in a conflict where armed groups deliberately target them and the government fails to protect them.”
U.S. President Donald Trump is now mulling whether to deploy as many as 5,000 extra troops to Afghanistan in a bid to bolster the 8,400 U.S. service men in the country and Afghan forces, which are stuck in a stalemate with the Taliban and a small but growing presence of IS insurgents.
On May 24, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told reporters on Air Force One that Trump’s Afghan policy review is still a “work in progress’ and a couple of weeks away from being presented.

‘Blood and Treasure’
“Trump’s generals are clear that the investments made by the U.S. and its allies, the blood and treasure expended, should not go to waste and that this would require some sort of improvement in troop strength, even without an ambitious surge,” said Ashok Malik, who heads the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation’s neighborhood regional studies initiative. “Incidents like this one pretty much strengthens the case made by the NSA and the generals.”

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