Gunman kills 2 Americans near Kabul NATO base

epa04876755 Afghan security officials stand guard outside a NATO base in Kabul a day after a suicide bomb attack, 08 August 2015. Three separate bombings left 48 people dead on 07 August in Kabul, as militants appeared step up attacks in the Afghan capital despite tight security measures by the government of President Ashraf Ghani. A suicide bomber blew himself up outside the police academy before midnight, killing 25 cadets and injuring many more, Afghan officials said. The bombing was claimed by the Taliban. The attack came almost 24 hours after a truck bombing at the Afghan Army's intelligence unit left 15 people dead, making Friday one of the deadliest days in the capital in recent years. In another incident the same day at least one Foreigners and 7 local security guards were killed when militants attacked a NATO base in Kabul.   EPA/JAWAD JALALI

 

Kabul / AFP

Two Americans including a civilian were killed on Wednesday when a gunman opened fire near a NATO base in Kabul on Wednesday, the military coalition said, with Afghan officials calling it an “insider attack”. No insurgent group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack, which highlights growing insecurity in Afghanistan as the Taliban step up their nationwide insurgency.
“One US service member and one US civilian died as a result of wounds sustained in Kabul today,” NATO said in a statement, adding that three other Americans were wounded in the incident.
“The two individuals were killed during an attack near a coalition base by an unknown assailant, who was later killed.”
Defence ministry spokesman Dawlat Waziri earlier said one NATO soldier had been killed and five others were wounded by a gunman wearing military uniform, indicating it was a so-called insider attack.
NATO said the Americans were conducting duties as part of their mission to train, advise and assist Afghan forces when they came under attack, adding that an investigation had been launched into the incident. “Anytime we lose a member of our team, it is deeply painful,” said General John Nicholson, the top US and NATO commander in Afghanistan.
“Our sympathies go out to the families, loved ones, and the units of those involved in this incident. To those who continue to target coalition forces… (we) will continue to pursue our mission to help our partners create a better Afghanistan.” So-called “green-on-blue” attacks—when Afghan soldiers or police turn their guns on international troops —have been a major problem during NATO’s long years fighting alongside Afghan forces. Gunmen wearing Afghan military uniforms shot dead two Romanian soldiers in the southern province of Kandahar in May.
In a similar attack in August last year, a man wearing an Afghan military uniform shot dead two American soldiers in the southern opium-rich province of Helmand.
And in April last year an American soldier was killed in a firefight between US and Afghan troops in eastern Afghanistan.
Western officials say most such attacks stem from personal grudges and cultural misunderstandings rather than insurgent plots.
The killings have bred fierce mistrust between local and foreign forces even as the rate of such incidents has dropped in recent years.

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