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Taliban Attacks Key U.S. Base In Afghanistan

First Posted: 05/19/10 08:44 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:30 PM ET

KABUL, Afghanistan — Insurgents launched a brazen pre-dawn assault Wednesday against the giant U.S.-run Bagram Air Field, killing an American contractor and wounding nine service members in the second Taliban strike at NATO forces in and around the capital in as many days.

At least 10 insurgents were killed as Taliban suicide bombers attempted to breach the defenses of the base north of Kabul, while others fired rockets and grenades inside, according to a statement issued by U.S. forces.


WATCH:

The attack started around 3 a.m. Blasts and gunfire only subsided around midday, said Master Sgt. Tom Clementson, a spokesman for U.S. forces. No insurgents managed to get into the base and none were able to detonate their suicide vests, the statement said.

The Bagram attack came a day after a suicide bomber struck a U.S. convoy in Kabul, killing 18 people. The dead included five American troops and a Canadian, making it the deadliest attack on NATO in the Afghan capital in eight months.

The back-to-back attacks show the militants intent to strike at the heart of the U.S.-led mission, apparently part of an offensive announced by the Taliban earlier this month – even as NATO prepares for a major operation to restore order in the turbulent south.

In the latest violence in the south, a NATO service member died in a bomb attack Wednesday, the military alliance said in a statement. It did not provide further details.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for both the Kabul bombing and the attack at Bagram, 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Kabul. Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said 20 suicide attackers were involved.

An Afghan provincial police commander, Gen. Abdul Rahman Sayedkhail, said the attack began when U.S. guards spotted would-be attackers in a car just outside the Bagram base. The Americans opened fire, triggering a gunbattle in which at least one militant triggered his suicide vest. Running gunbattles broke out as U.S. troops hunted down the other attackers.

Four of the killed insurgents were intended suicide bombers, the U.S. statement said. The base was undamaged except for "minor" damage to one building, it added. Spokesmen had previously said the building was not strategically important.

In February 2007, a suicide bombing killed more than 20 people at a Bagram security gate while Vice President Dick Cheney was inside the base. Cheney was unhurt but the Taliban said he was the target.

Tuesday was the deadliest day of the year for U.S. forces in Afghanistan with seven Americans dead – including two who died in separate attacks in the south. Twelve Afghan civilians also died in Tuesday's blast – many of them on a public bus in rush-hour traffic along a major thoroughfare that runs by the ruins of a one-time royal palace and government ministries.

(AP) The attacks follow a Taliban announcement earlier this month of a spring offensive – "Operation Al-Fatah" or "Victory" – which would target NATO forces, foreign diplomats, contractors and Afghan government officials.

The announcement was made on the eve of a visit by President Hamid Karzai to Washington and comes as U.S., NATO and Afghan forces are gearing up for a major operation to secure Kandahar, the biggest city in the south and the former Taliban headquarters before they were ousted from power in the 2001 U.S.-led invasion. U.S. officials believe control of Kandahar is the key to stabilizing the Taliban' southern heartland.

NATO's senior civilian representative in Afghanistan said that Taliban attacks like those in Kabul and in the south have not delayed the Kandahar operation or any of NATO's key goals over the next few months.

"The overall campaign is on track," Mark Sedwill told reporters. He stressed that the Kandahar operation will not be a quick-strike offensive like this past winter's push into the town of Marjah in neighboring Helmand province.

Since the Taliban is not in complete control of Kandahar city and its surrounding villages, the first stage of the mission is meetings with local leaders. Then NATO forces expect to launch a series of operations over weeks or months to establish security, he said.

"Although we will have more difficult days like yesterday, I believe that by the end of this year we will be able to demonstrate that we have the initiative and the momentum is with us," Sedwill said.

Also Wednesday, Afghan and NATO aircraft continued the search for an Afghan commercial airliner which disappeared Monday on a flight from Kunduz to Kabul with 44 people on board, including three British citizens and an American. Air traffic controllers lost track of the Antonov-24, operated by Pamir Airways, when it was about 55 miles (85 kilometers) north of Kabul.

- RAHIM FAIEZ and HEIDI VOGT

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KABUL, Afghanistan — Insurgents launched a brazen pre-dawn assault Wednesday against the giant U.S.-run Bagram Air Field, killing an American contractor and wounding nine service members in the ...
KABUL, Afghanistan — Insurgents launched a brazen pre-dawn assault Wednesday against the giant U.S.-run Bagram Air Field, killing an American contractor and wounding nine service members in the ...
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f0rTyLeGz
Everything is falling.
04:21 AM on 05/23/2010
The war in Afghanistan is a classic guerrilla war. When we came crashing into Afghanistan NINE years ago, al Queda had a position. And we quickly chased them off it, and they fled into Pakistan. Since then we have brought millions of tons of military equipment into Afghanistan, and 150,000 troops that we must protect. The enemy has no position, and no territory to hold. They attack us when it is good for them, and then disappear. There is no leader to capture that would end the war, or battle victory that would settle the conflict. We have to flush the enemy fighters out a few at a time, or wait until they attack us. A very dangerous position that Sun Tzu would abhor.
02:48 AM on 05/21/2010
Time to get the troops out now.
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Macnos
11:05 PM on 05/20/2010
I hear a lot of people constantly saying that Obama should have withdrawn from Afghanistan but my question is, do those people ever bother to think of what would happen if the troops were withdrawn? First of all the rest of the NATO allies would pull out, staying would mean contributing more troops to make up for those Americans who have just left and we all know Europeans have always been opposed to being in that country.

Secondly the Taliban would obviously claim victory and receive a huge boost in moral and if that's not bad enough Kazai's government would be on the receiving end if a taliban offensive and when you factor in the fact that Kazai's biggest supporter is no longer there to protect him then it is safe to assume that it is only a matter of time before the government falls.

People should really think before they just blurt out "bring the troops home".
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12:54 AM on 05/21/2010
Like the usual puppet governments installed by the US in 'liberated' countries, Kazai is an autocrat heading a corrupt government. So where's the big loss?
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Macnos
02:33 PM on 05/21/2010
You really don't get it, do you?. Yes, Kazai is has all the markings of an autocrat but i would rather have him in charge than the Taliban. It it simply a matter of choosing the lesser of two evils (Kazai or the Taliban). You clearly don't know much about what's at stake in Afghanistan judging from your question, "so where's the big loss?".
longtimegone
my micro-bio remains empty
01:17 AM on 05/21/2010
Bring the troops home.
08:17 AM on 05/20/2010
I have to respect that the Taliban have guts and are real serious about getting NATO out.
07:21 PM on 05/20/2010
Respect the Taliban? I guess that makes you one sicksonofabitch.
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imperator prime
10:01 PM on 05/22/2010
That's a *gross* oversimplification. If conviction itself is a virtue-- and we certainly like to argue that it is when we're talking abour our own-- then admiring an opponent's conviction doesn't make a person "sick." "Sickness" would be working against what you believe to be right. But merely acknowledging your opponent's conviction doesn't do that.

Though it's repugnant to us, though it's anathema to us, they really do believe that they're right. Just as we do. They believe that they're entitled to their chosen way of life. Just as we do. They believe that that they are engaged in self-defense and that their cause is just. Just as (for the most part) we do. And they're willing to die for it. You can call them evil, you can call them ignorant, you can call them deranged, but you can't rightly call them cowards.

Frankly, if you're objective about differing cultures then our moral high ground is non-existent. We're just another side vying to be on top. For my own part, absent the belief in a god to arbitrate or judge, I'm content to hope that strength-- the strength of progress and innovation, the strength of greater human appeal, the strength of our own conviction-- will see us prevail and that we'll use our power wisely and justly.
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Abdi S
07:00 AM on 05/20/2010
The coming years the Talibans will be immune to the war as expert on there own soil but Obama does not want to withdraw troops. Already a lot of war crimes was done to Afghanistan population, and talibans use propaganda on the war crime victims as way to recruit new soldiers. Afghanistan will be worser than Iraq, and Vietnam in my opinion.
02:34 PM on 05/20/2010
It is impossible to wage war without each side in the conflict committing warcrimes. The NATO, especially the USA, forces are active in investigating and prosecuting those in our forces who commit warcrimes. The Taliban commit large numbers of warcrimes without their side of the conflict taking any actions to prevent them. As to what your definition of a warcrime is, only you know that. In every war each side of the conflict uses psychilogical warfare by claiming that the other side commits major warcrimes. By the way, 'worser' is a no longer acceptable word that was used mostly in the 15th -17th centuries. 'Worse' or 'worst' are now the acceptable forms - just an FYI, not part of the article.

SFC Guy Salsburg, US Army Retired. Was active in anti-terrorism & schooled in psychilogical warfare.
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General Armchair
What, me worry?
04:08 AM on 05/20/2010
Not seeing a story yet on Huff Post, but it will be news:

Killed in the massive suicide car bomb in Kabul two days ago:

US: John M. McHugh, Colonel, 46, U.S. Army Battle Command Training Program, Fort Leavenworth, KS
US: Thomas P. Belkofer, Lieutenant Colonel, 44, Headquarters, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry), Fort Drum, NY
US: Paul R. Bartz, Lieutenant Colonel, 43, Headquarters, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry), Fort Drum, NY
US: Richard J.Tieman, Staff Sergeant, 28, Special Troops Battalion, V Corps, Heidelberg, Germany
US: Joshua A, Tomlinson, Specialist, 24, Special Troops Battalion, V Corps, Heidelberg, Germany
Canada: Geoff Parker, Colonel, 42, Land Forces Central Area Headquarters, CFB Gagetown. New Brunswick

I believe Parker is the highest ranked Canadian officer to die in Afghanistan, three Majors have died (two last year).

McHugh is the second US Colonel to die in Afghanistan, and I don't believe any higher rank has died there. 13 US Lieutenant Colonels have died, five of which (Belkofer and Bartz) are listed as due to hostile action (the rest due to accidents, etc.).
09:24 AM on 05/20/2010
So sad. My heart goes out to their loved ones.
06:20 AM on 05/29/2010
Another to add to the above list. A sad week indeed....

Contractor Hailed As Hero.
Ex Marine Gary Lakis was hailed as a hero today 5 days after saving the lives of a female US DOS employee and her Afghan driver while under attack. The attack came early Wednesday morning when the convoy Lakis was traveling with came under heavy attack by Taliban Gunmen. One armored vehicle was hit and disabled in the initial attack then Lakis’ vehicle also became disabled. Lakis, who was now wounded, moved from his vehicle under fire to the second car to aid an American DOS employee and her driver. While moving back to retrieve the driver, Lakis was injured a second time but continued to rescue the driver and was able to evacuate both persons to a waiting vehicle and all we able to move to a local hospital. The DOS employee was airlifted to an ISAF airbase but word came out Lakis did not make it to the base alive. In statements this morning a DOD Spokeswoman said Lakis was extremely brave and will be sorely missed by all who knew him.

http://beta.thehindu.com/news/international/article43337.ece?homepage=true
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ljkcan
Yes, I am prone to spelling errors
12:44 PM on 05/20/2010
He is the highest ranking officer so far his remains arrive at Trenton this afternoon. When I was young there was a family that lived on the next street and they moved to Oakville many years ago and I pray it was not him. Same name would have been the same age. I hate this bloody useless war.
12:20 AM on 05/20/2010
You mean the locals don't like being shot at and ruled by foreigners from the other side of the world? Don't they realize we stand only for freedom and democracy and honesty and equality?
Boy, those guys just don't get it.
Maybe Rush and his millionaire pals can explain it to them.
04:02 AM on 05/20/2010
Rhetoric.
We don't rule Afghanistan.
Come back with something intelligent.
06:29 AM on 05/20/2010
We shoot people there for no reason. The ranking general there said so.
08:41 AM on 05/20/2010
Sad but true.
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MyTake
Release the Hydrogen Economy now!
11:19 PM on 05/19/2010
Oh, how nicely does the Military skate around their "bad" days.

After 10 years, all the rotating General's have yet to figure out who is supplying the weapons, munitions and bomb making materials to the Taliban and the CIA-Qaeda.

Rule #1 of any Military War Manual reads "CUT OFF THE SUPPLIES AND SUPPLY LINES TO THE OPPOSING FIGHTING FORCE. Apparently the those American General's missed that class on war fundamentals training at West Point.

America engages in wars for just three reasons. One is to unload their vast Military Warehouses of those aging bombs and munitions and replace them with the new hi-tech versions. Another is to reduce global overpopulation. Another is to control oil and drugs.

So in Iraq, they got the oil and killed off over a million people. In Afghanistan they ensured no oil and gas pipelines are going through that region to compete with the global oil cartels. And that dear little tax paid for organization called the CIA and the Merc's are exporting drugs from that region to finance and widen the Merc's scope and scale of operations which will come into play before 2012.

Maybe on the 4th of July, America should abandon its traditional holiday and grab a lawn chair and sit out in the street in a national day of protest. They need to protest and take back their government, protest those wars and protest the rise of the Corporate State in their country which has overpowered the government.
04:10 AM on 05/20/2010
I suggest you go do some research rather than developing theories based on what the greeters at Walmart think.
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
08:16 AM on 05/20/2010
I think we have a winner! My Take's post has to be the DUMBEST one scored on here in quite some time..

Take a bow!
09:18 PM on 05/19/2010
Afghanistan has been reported to have substantial mineral wealth unexploited. I am not completely clear on what it is, but no doubt it would be a great place for an open pit mine and mountaintop removal. If that turns out to be true, suddenly the missing reason could appear. Would anybody invest this much blood and treasure for revenge? Is it about Bin Ladin?
Give the Bin Ladin job to skip tracers or bail hunters. They would not have trouble finding him. If he owed $12. to his dentist, a collection agent could find him in a matter of weeks, and my bet would be to start in Saudi Arabia, living comfortably with his family in a Wahabist community.
To measure who is winning one would need to know what we intend to win, which has not been made clear to me, but either way I think it is too late to make a deal, because today we come from a position of weakness. We can only leave, or end up cut off from our supplies and die.
04:44 AM on 05/20/2010
Osama Bin Laden is a spoiled brat-child of a Billionare.
His 'allowance' is reported to be 7 million a year.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bin_Laden_family

Just sayin' because many seem to think he's a sheep herder gone wild or something.
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08:31 PM on 05/19/2010
We should be working to keep al Qaeda neutralised, or better yet, destroyed, but this guerilla war against forces that a sizable portion of the Afghan populace supports is not something we should be involved in.

The Taliban did not attack us on 9/11 or prior to that date. The Taliban government offered to turn Osama bin Laden over for trial to a third country. So tell me again, why did Pres. Bush decide we had to go to war against the Taliban instead of against al Qaeda?

Couldn't we have just gone in with 5,000 special forces, as was requested at the time by the American commander on the ground, wiped out al Qaeda in their base at Tora Bora, and then gotten back out, without getting involved in the Afghan civil war?

For all the talk from the last administration about listening to the commanders on the ground, they sure didn't follow their own advice.
09:38 PM on 05/19/2010
Bush did screw this up. Don't pretend, however, that you have some inside information. If you do, lay it out.
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Garbaj
What is the Matrix?
10:25 PM on 05/19/2010
it might have something to do with that oil pipeline that was completed and opened for business shortly after karzai became president.
seems we either haven't paid enough attention to what happened to the russian excursion into that country or like vietnam before it we're just so arrogant that we think we can do it better. either way, its been 9 years with no bin laden and the taliban still not vanquished.
pres. obama was right when he said that we dropped the ball when bush & co. refused to press the advantage at tora bora but his insistence on fighting the taliban just to assuage the goodwill of a corrupt karzai government is unexplainable. we should be pursuing al-qaeda into waziristan or whichever border region they happen to be hiding in.
instead here we are, 9 years in and no RELEVANT successes to speak of. the russians exhausted 10 yrs worth of men & materiel and practically bankrupted themselves trying conquer that land. its not called the graveyard of empires for nothing...i wonder if we READ that memo...???
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05:41 AM on 05/20/2010
The American commander on the ground at Tora Bora who coordinated American bombing missions and who asked for (and was turned down) 5,000 special forces to get rid of Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda wrote a book and was interviewed on cable TV, including The Daily Show, with Jon Stewart. It is a matter of record, not inside information.
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bascombe
Send the kids off to die, bleed their country dry.
08:28 PM on 05/19/2010
Afghanistan Coalition Military Fatalities By Year
Year US UK Other Total
2001 12 0 0 12
2002 49 3 17 69
2003 48 0 9 57
2004 52 1 7 60
2005 99 1 31 131
2006 98 39 54 191
2007 117 42 73 232
2008 155 51 89 295
2009 316 108 96 520
2010 134 40 36 210
Total 1080 285 412 1777
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bascombe
Send the kids off to die, bleed their country dry.
08:28 PM on 05/19/2010
Iraq Coalition Military Fatalities By Year
Year US UK Other Total
2003 486 53 41 580
2004 849 22 35 906
2005 846 23 28 897
2006 822 29 21 872
2007 904 47 10 961
2008 314 4 4 322
2009 149 1 0 150
2010 27 0 0 27
Total 4397 179 139 4715
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Sonkwa Sonkwa
07:31 PM on 05/19/2010
They were summoned from the hillside
They were called in from the glen,
And the country found them ready
At the stirring call for men.
Let no tears add to their hardships
As the soldiers pass along,
And although your heart is breaking
Make it sing this cheery song:

Keep the Home Fires Burning,
While your hearts are yearning,
Though your lads are far away
They dream of home.
There's a silver lining
Through the dark clouds shining,
Turn the dark cloud inside out
'Til the boys come home.

Overseas there came a pleading,
"Help a nation in distress."
And we gave our glorious laddies
Honour bade us do no less,
For no gallant son of freedom
To a tyrant's yoke should bend,
And a noble heart must answer
To the sacred call of "Friend."

Keep the Home Fires Burning,
While your hearts are yearning,
Though your lads are far away
They dream of home.
There's a silver lining
Through the dark clouds shining,
Turn the dark cloud inside out
'Til the boys come home.

all together this time..with feeling!
04:51 PM on 05/19/2010
I swear, when the Russians were in Afghanistan there was more coverage.
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PWM
Eisenhower Rep. The 1% started class warfare.
05:51 PM on 05/19/2010
I have to agree.
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08:50 PM on 05/19/2010
Excellent point. Amazing. Depressing.
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04:28 PM on 05/19/2010
I'd say a few more years and the Taliban may have an elite unit that can carry out such sophisticated, coordinated operations. It seem you need to blast through a wall after or during another distraction on the other side. I dont know if Taliban commanders are educated, but it reminded me of the Tet Offensive in Vietnam. It was never going to destroy American power, but it demonstrated Vietcong resilience and formidability enough to sway American sentiments as an occupier protecting an illegitimate regime.
04:41 PM on 05/19/2010
Another actor in the "Men who stare at Goats" tragicomedy.
BubbaC33
Jimmy Buffett is the greatest American
05:33 PM on 05/19/2010
The problem with your posting is simple. The Tet Offensive was a significant defeat for the NVA and resulted in the almost complete destruction of the VC forces. It was a shock to the American people given the reports shared by the US military prior to the offensive, but the US was able to carry the day.
08:15 PM on 05/19/2010
War is politics by other means.

While the Viet Cong might have been defeated militarily (although the North Vietnamese weren't) it was a victory because it succeeded politically.
09:26 PM on 05/19/2010
The US carried Tet? Body counts do not make a win. Our departure, running under fire, did not look like a win. In the traditional manner of winning a war, the Vietnamese people wore down their enemy's will to fight, and thereby gained their freedom. They drove out the French first, then the Americans tried. At least we had the straight story on that one. When Eisenhower was committing troops to take over from the French, in a speech before the national governors conference, he said, If we lose the titanium in Vietnam we will lose the space race. The war was over when carbon fiber replaced titanium in space vehicles.