By Mamoon Durrani | AFP
http://news.yahoo.com/gunman-afghan-army-uniform-kills-two-nato-troops-083018118.html
Three
foreign soldiers, two of them British, were killed by Afghan security personnel
Monday in two separate shootings, officials said, bringing the number of such
deaths to 16 this year.
An Afghan soldier said to
be an officer shot dead the Britons in the southern province of Helmand, while
the NATO-led International Security Assistance
Force said an "alleged member" of the police killed a trooper
in eastern Afghanistan.
More than
one in six of the 91 foreign soldiers to have died in the country in 2012 has
been killed in so-called "green-on-blue" attacks by Afghan security
personnel, significantly raising tensions between NATO forces and their local
colleagues.
"It appears that a
member of the Afghan national army opened fire at the entrance gate to the
British headquarters in Lashkar Gah city, killing the two British service
personnel," said Britain's Defence Secretary Philip Hammond. The attacker
was shot dead by coalition forces and officials said another British soldier
was severely wounded. Lashkar Gah is the main town in Helmand, a Taliban stronghold, but was among the first places
where security responsibility was handed from ISAF
to Afghan forces as part of a gradual transition process.
Provincial police chief
Abdul Nabi Elham said the gunman was a lieutenant named Gul Nazar from Jalalabad.
"As soon as the NATO soldiers opened
the gate for him and his team in their centre, this soldier opened fire at them
and killed them," he said. "We don't know the motive behind this
attack and have not found a link to the Taliban. We are still investigating."
A spokesman for the
militants contacted by AFP described the gunman as being "in contact"
with them, although he did not claim the attack as being mounted by the
Taliban. "Today an army officer who was in contact with us killed three
NATO soldiers in Helmand," said Qari Yousif Ahmadi by telephone from an
undisclosed location.
The Taliban regularly
exaggerate their claims. Exact details of the incident remained unclear, with
accounts differing on whether an argument took place before the shooting started,
and whether another Afghan soldier was killed.
The
shooting comes less than three weeks after six British soldiers were killed
when a huge explosion ripped through their armoured vehicle near Lashkar Gah.
Taliban
insurgents claimed responsibility for that attack, which pushed the number of
British dead in Afghanistan over the 400 mark.
ISAF said in a statement
that in the second incident its service member was "shot by an alleged
member of the Afghan local police as the security force approached an ALP
checkpoint". It did not state the victim's nationality, in line with
policy. The shooting happened in Paktika province, where the governor's
spokesman said two policemen were involved, both of whom were wounded when NATO
forces returned fire and arrested.
Monday's
deaths brought the number of ISAF service members killed by Afghan security
personnel this year to 16.
The previous victims of
green-on-blue attacks were six Americans, four French army trainers, an
Albanian and two ISAF personnel whose nationality has not been disclosed. The
US-led NATO force is training Afghanistan's own units to take over national security by the end of 2014, allowing
foreign combat troops to withdraw after a costly and lengthy war against the
Taliban insurgency.
But a recent report
commissioned by the US military found deep distrust and suspicion between
Afghan and American troops, describing green-on-blue shootings as a
"systemic" problem and calling into question NATO's plans.
Such killings, often driven
by resentment, "are provoking a crisis of confidence and trust among
Westerners" training Afghan national security
forces, the 2011 document said.
It found
Afghan soldiers saw their US comrades as rude, disrespectful and reckless with
gunfire when civilians were nearby, while for their part American troops
described Afghan troops as traitorous, lazy, drug-addled and corrupt.
The frequency of
green-on-blue incidents this year reached a peak after copies of the Koran were
burned at an incinerator pit at the US-run Bagram airbase, leading US President
Barack Obama to apologise for what he described as an error.
Around 40
people were killed in days of violent demonstrations as protesters targeted
Western bases.
At one point NATO withdrew
all its advisers from Afghan government ministries after two US officers were
killed inside the interior ministry, apparently by an Afghan colleague. Some,
but not all, have since returned.
On March 11, a massacre of
17 Afghan civilians, including nine children and four women, blamed on a lone
American soldier brought relations between Kabul and Washington to a further
low.
Britain is the second
biggest contributor of troops to Afghanistan after the United States with 9,500
soldiers, but it is set to pull out all combat forces by the end of 2014 in line
with other NATO nations.
ISAF statements released in
Kabul said Afghan and NATO investigations had been opened into the latest
killings.
Elsewhere in southern Afghanistan, police said a
suicide bomber blew himself up outside a US-run base in Chora district in
Uruzgan province, wounding three foreign troops and an Afghan policeman.
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