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NATO Says Its Forces Repel Attack On Kabul Base In Afghanistan

Kabul

First Posted: 04/02/11 04:04 AM ET Updated: 06/01/11 06:12 AM ET

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Three insurgents attacked a NATO base on the outskirts of Afghanistan's capital Saturday but were killed by coalition forces before they could enter the compound, NATO and Afghan police said.

The attack came just hours after Afghans angry over the burning of a Quran at a U.S. church stormed a U.N. compound in northern Afghanistan, killing seven foreigners.

NATO told The Associated Press in an email that three of its soldiers were wounded in Saturday's attack against Camp Phoenix, but that their injuries were not serious. The coalition said at least one attacker was possibly wearing a suicide vest. It added that the attack had ended.

Kabul provincial Police chief Gen. Mohammad Ayub Salangi said there were reports of three attackers involved and that two of them died when their vests detonated. He said a third was shot.

The base's gate had scorch marks on it, and an AP reporter at the scene saw some of the remains of at least one body belonging to a man who had blown himself up dangling from the gate.

Police officer Mohammad Shakir told the AP outside the base that two suicide bombers were involved in the attack and were apparently wearing burqas, the all-encompassing turquoise-colored coverings worn by many women in Afghanistan. The body of a third insurgent was just inside the gate, he said. He was shot and killed, Shakir said.

Camp Phoenix is a base on the eastern edge of Kabul used mostly by American forces to help train the Afghan army and police.

On Friday, Afghans angry over the burning of a Quran at a small Florida church stormed a U.N. compound in northern Afghanistan, killing seven foreigners, including four Nepalese guards.

Afghan authorities suspect insurgents melded into the mob. They announced the arrest of more than 20 people, including a militant they suspect was the ringleader of Friday's assault in Mazar-i-Sharif, the provincial capital of Balkh province. The suspect was an insurgent from Kapisa province, a hotbed of militancy about 250 miles (400 kilometers) southeast of the city, said Rawof Taj, deputy provincial police chief.

The topic of Quran burning stirred outrage among millions of Muslims and others worldwide after the Rev. Terry Jones' small church, Dove Outreach Center, threatened to destroy a copy of the holy book last year. The pastor backed down, but the church in Gainesville, Florida, went through with the burning last month.

Four protesters also died in the violence in Mazar-i-Sharif, which is on a list of the first seven areas of the country where Afghan security forces are slated to take over from the U.S.-led coalition starting in July. Other demonstrations, which were peaceful, were held in Kabul and Herat in western Afghanistan, fueling resentment against the West at a critical moment in the Afghan war.

Protesters burned a U.S. flag at a sports stadium in Herat and chanted "Death to the U.S." and "They broke the heart of Islam." About 100 people gathered at a traffic circle near the U.S. Embassy in Kabul. One protester carried a sign that read: "We want these bloody bastard Americans with all their forces to leave Afghanistan."

U.N. peacekeeping chief Alain LeRoy said the top U.N. envoy in Afghanistan, Staffan De Mistura, who is in Mazar-i-Sharif, believes "the U.N. was not the target."

"They wanted to find an international target and the U.N. was the one there in Mazar-i-Sharif," LeRoy told reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York.

The U.N. and national governments said the dead included four security guards from Nepal; Joakim Dungel, a 33-year-old Swede who worked at the U.N. office; Lt. Col. Siri Skare, a 53-year-old female pilot working for the U.N.; and a Romanian citizen.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said the head of the mission in Mazar-i-Sharif, a Russian citizen, was injured in the attack, but not seriously.

Police who went to investigate said the U.N. compound was littered with broken glass and bullet casings.

Abdul Karim, a police officer in the city, said he saw the bullet-riddled bodies of three Nepalese guards lying in the yard and a fourth on the first floor.

He said another victim with a serious head wound died on a stairway to the basement of the compound. A man who was killed inside a room had severe wounds to his face and body, Karim said.

Munir Ahmad Farhad, a spokesman in Balkh province, said the protest began peacefully when several hundred demonstrators gathered outside the U.N. mission's compound, choosing an obvious symbol of the international community's involvement in Afghanistan to denounce the Quran's desecration. It turned violent when some protesters seized the guards' weapons and started shooting, then the crowds stormed the building and set fires that sent plumes of black smoke into the air, he said.

One protester, Ahmad Gul, a 32-year-old teacher in the city, gave a different account. He said the protesters disarmed three guards to prevent any violence from breaking out. Associated Press video showed protesters banging AK-47 rifles on the curb, breaking them into pieces. He said the protesters were killed and wounded by Afghan security forces.

"I disarmed three guards myself and we took out the bullets," Gul said, sternly shaking his finger as he shouted. "With my eyes, I saw them (Afghan security forces) kill two and wound 10." As he talked, he became increasingly indignant and he started shouting: "Death to America!" "We are going to fight."

LeRoy, the U.N. peacekeeping chief, said the security guards, all Gurkhas, "tried their best" but were unable to prevent the large number of demonstrators, some armed, from storming the U.N. compound.

The U.N. Security Council held an emergency meeting late Friday and condemned the attack "in the strongest terms."

The U.N.'s most powerful body also condemned "all incitement to and acts of violence" and called on the Afghan government to bring those responsible to justice and take steps to protect U.N. personnel and premises.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who is in Nairobi, said it was "an outrageous and cowardly attack against U.N. staff, which cannot be justified under any circumstances and I condemn in the strongest possible terms."

He instructed De Mistura to assess the situation and take any "necessary measures to ensure the safety of all U.N. staff."

LeRoy said U.N. officials would be reviewing security for U.N. personnel in Afghanistan.

President Barack Obama condemned the attack and underscored the importance of the U.N.'s work in Afghanistan.

"We stress the importance of calm and urge all parties to reject violence and resolve differences through dialogue," Obama said.

At the U.S. State Department, spokesman Mark Toner said the burning of a Quran in Florida was contrary to Americans' respect for Islam and religious tolerance. "This is an isolated act done by a small group of people and ... does not reflect the respect the people of the United States have toward Islam," he said.

The church's website stated that after a five-hour trial on March 20, the Quran "was found guilty and a copy was burned inside the building." A picture on the website shows a book in flames in a small portable fire pit. The church on Friday confirmed that the Quran had been burned.

In a statement, Jones did not comment on whether the church's act had led to the deaths. Instead he said it was time to "hold Islam accountable" and called on the United States and the U.N. to hold "these countries and people accountable for what they have done as well as for any excuses they may use to promote their terrorist activities."

The U.N. has been the target of previous attacks.

In October 2010, a suicide car bomber and three armed militants wearing explosives vests and dressed as women attacked a U.N. compound in Herat in western Afghanistan. Afghan security forces killed the attackers and no U.N. employees were harmed. In October 2009, Taliban militants attacked a guesthouse used by United Nations workers in central Kabul. Eight people were killed, including five foreigners working for the U.N.

___

Associated Press writers Amir Shah in Kabul, Edith M. Lederer at the U.N. and Mitch Stacy in Tampa, Florida, contributed to this report.

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KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Three insurgents attacked a NATO base on the outskirts of Afghanistan's capital Saturday but were killed by coalition forces before they could enter the compound, NATO and A...
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Three insurgents attacked a NATO base on the outskirts of Afghanistan's capital Saturday but were killed by coalition forces before they could enter the compound, NATO and A...
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09:05 AM on 04/03/2011
Hey buck-o, can we leave now?
shylove2
warfare state is pathological
08:43 PM on 04/02/2011
A sign that they are really anxious for us to stay and establish a western style democratic multi-national corporate brave new world mono-culture at our taxpayers and soldiers expense...
10:13 AM on 04/04/2011
A couple of things to consider. This was an attack by 3 attackers. The vast majority of Afghans do want the presence of U.S. forces. 62% of Afghans support the presence of U.S. forces (ABC News/BBC/ARD/Washington Post poll Oct. 29-Nov. 13, 2010).

Also, if the U.S. was ever trying to establish a western style McDonalds democracy, it has long given up that effort. No one is trying to do that now. We need only stay until the Afghans themselves can prevent the return of the Taliban to power.

-Card-Carrying American
http://cardcarryingamerican.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Card-Carrying-American/149565408390518
07:22 PM on 04/02/2011
After almost ten years of expensive, deadly, and debilitating (for both countries) war in Afghanistan, we have not yet even been able to secure the capitol of the country -- as this most recent attack again demonstrates. After spending a trillion+ dollars, seeing the loss of countless soldiers and civilians on both sides (maimed and killed), and registering no demonstrable progress on the ground, isn't it time to end this war and bring our troops and our money home to deal with our problems in this country? As many on the HuffPost have pointed out, the troops could be redeployed to infrastructure maintenance and repair, and the money could be divided between paying down our debt and providing much-needed services for our own population. The Karzai family has been paid enough money. The President should end this without delay and redirect the resources to our own country.
07:24 AM on 04/03/2011
All points taken.

Nato has no business there. Apart from the money pit people on both sides literally die for nothing. I can imagine it must be hard to lose loved ones in a fight to protect your country, people or your resources. How bizarre and sad must be to know that lives are lost for nothing.
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03:37 PM on 04/03/2011
Leave this Stone Age cesspool now;the only thing we have accomplished here is the senseless
waste of our national treasure and a drain on our treasury. Total MIC folly; ABJECT FAILURE
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
06:26 PM on 04/02/2011
You know it's springtime in Afghanistan when the jihading season begins. Another long, hot summer is coming.
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03:31 PM on 04/02/2011
Suicide bombers attack the forces of an invading, occupying army. It's pretty obvious how this is going to turn out in the long run. The west needs to get out now, take care of it's own people and borders and let the spy agencies take care of the nasty anti-terror business. This war is a nightmare of stupid actions for stupid reasons.
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terry63
No one expects the spanish inquisition
06:58 PM on 04/03/2011
We are not invaders. we are guests of the northern Alliance. When the Afghan people want us gone. they will send more than a couple of Suicide bombers dressed in burkas.
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07:36 PM on 04/04/2011
Where to begin... First off, the northern alliance you mention is an invention of the CIA stupidly parroted by the media. There's no such thing. They have no legal standing, no constitution, no capital, no currency, no institutions beyond their supply lines with NATO, the US Army and the CIA. I think there's no doubt we invaded Afghanistan in pursuit of OBL and with hopes of destroying the Taliban. Wrong on both counts but, oh well, what's another invasion more or less for the empire?
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Si1ver1ock
So long, and thanks for all the fish...
03:30 PM on 04/02/2011
TheAfgan resistance shouldn't attack en masse. They should put foward token resistance to keep allied forces engaged while working to cut supply lines.

This war will end when America is bankrupt.
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Cw Fahringer
02:18 PM on 04/02/2011
I don't see much of a difference between this wacko pastor and the modern day republican party.....they act like the very muslim extremist they protest to hate (well they just hate all muslims but you get my point)
iridium53
Semper Fi
01:24 PM on 04/02/2011
The Afghanis want us to leave Afghanistan.

The United States went into Afghanistan to find and apprehend Osama bin Laden.
So far, U.S. forces have failed in that mission.

The United States has spent a HALF TRILLION $ - so far on this. The eventual costs, with debt service and the associate costs will be more than a TRILLION.

Americans will be paying off this debt for this war, and Iraq, which will be more than Three TRILLON, for a couple of generations.

The choice is quite simple - you have to pay for this debt:

Do you want to pay for building schools in Afghanistan?
Or, do you want to pay for better schools for your children or grandchildren?

Do you want to pay for roads and bridges and infrastructure in Afghanistan?
Or, do you want to pay for roads. and bridges and infrastructure in the United States?

Do you want to have libraries, buildings, hospitals, healthcare available to YOU and your family?
Or, are you still willing after all these years to have politicians lie to you about Afghanistan?

Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda are still doing what they do.
The longest war in American history - and the basic mission has not been achieved.
When is enough, enough America?

When does the gravy train of kleptocracy to American war profiteer multi-national companies stop?
Benjacomin Bozart
Jefferson-better to eat bacon at home than to rule
02:29 PM on 04/02/2011
The Republicans call building roads and schools and libraries, hospitals, infrastructure, and citizen health care evil socialism and will fight to the death to save US citizens of it''s evil. They will also fight to the death to provide it all to the gallant Afghans, Iraqis, and anyone else the military is. We are in Afghanistan because the military wants to be there. The Generals want to strut around killing and destroying people and places so they can get off on power trips. Plus its fun. Then they retire and get 6 or 7 figure salaries with the "defense" industries who do well by defending the country. Not from bankruptcy as 100M Americans could starve to death and they would still demand to be paid.
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05:38 PM on 04/02/2011
The Greedy Old Profiteers and MIC have their agenda and it doesn't coincide with that
of the average American. We need to be saved FROM them
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05:33 PM on 04/02/2011
Agree. Its been a wild goose chase. They had him long ago but weren't allowed to finish the job
as that wasn't in the MIC profit model
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ewldest
I don't care "whose" war it is - end it now
12:27 PM on 04/02/2011
NATO probably released news of the attack - which, being small and ineffective, could easily have been swept under the rug - as a means of distracting attention from the protests. Obviously it didn't work.
Indeed, the two stories combine to give the impression that even in the capitol stronghold of the US coilonization effort in Afghanistan, the colonial forces cannot exert real control or provide real security to their own people.
This occupation has already failed. The likelihood of it growing bloodier - and more embarassing - with the possibility of a general uprising of the native population, increases every day.
We should pull out now before it's too late.
10:48 AM on 04/02/2011
When civilians attack US enemies, they are called rebels, when civilians attack US army, they are called insurgents
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
11:24 AM on 04/02/2011
It's all in the wording to get the support the mic wants
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02:41 PM on 04/02/2011
I call it semantics
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blackranger
10:31 AM on 04/02/2011
It is not just about oil in Afghanistan, they have tons of very valuable mineral deposits as well and the Chinese are buying rights to those minerals. They are willing to pay higher prices than anyone else because they understand future needs. Bush and his policies of world domination have put Americans in a very bad light worldwide. Obama has a different foreign policy, no nation building. Accepting that we now live in a global economy, Americans are slow to accept the fact that they will never rule the world, Obama is quietly getting us out of Afghanistan which was yet another mess created by the previous administrations.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
1776 or 1984
IT'S AN EMPIRE, NOT A REPUBLIC!
11:43 AM on 04/02/2011
O. is not getting out of Stan because he ain't in charge
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Si1ver1ock
So long, and thanks for all the fish...
03:34 PM on 04/02/2011
The Chinese were also in Libya in the oil fields.

See here-->http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2011/0302/Libya-unrest-tests-China-s-interests-in-the-Middle-East
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blackranger
10:23 AM on 04/02/2011
The media had no reason to give Jones any credibility. What Jones did was disgraceful but giving Jones all the publicity was a much bigger crime. We are supposed to be a secular country, and we all need to condemn Jones.
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02:45 PM on 04/02/2011
I sure do he and his ilk are dangerous and should be held accountable.

Fire and brimstone for these hateful fanatics, amen, amen brother.
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Morgan Stubblefield
10:18 AM on 04/02/2011
My husband has been over there for almost 8 months now, and his unit's greatest accomplishment is the finding of a dam the Afghan contracts lost after they built it. No one wrote down where the dam had been built. He spent three days walking around looking for it. I do not think it's been worth it for him to miss the birth of his first child and risk his life.
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dayzee10
Get busy living or get busy dying! Damn right
10:50 AM on 04/02/2011
Prayers to you and yours. Most of us want those patriots back home where they belong.
09:43 PM on 04/02/2011
Agreed. I hope your husband comes home soon.
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Morgan Stubblefield
10:40 PM on 04/02/2011
Thank you both!
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Robert Frank
My last name is FRANK so thats what I am..
09:44 AM on 04/02/2011
wow were really making progress now...another attack repelled...hmm who would have thought people would attack us in THEIR country?
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VKoval
veteran of vietnam vacation '07
09:22 AM on 04/02/2011
the american military rules
Benjacomin Bozart
Jefferson-better to eat bacon at home than to rule
02:29 PM on 04/02/2011
That's the problem. They aren't supposed to. Obama certainly isn't.