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3 British Soldiers Killed by Afghan Police Colleague

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3 British Soldiers Killed by Afghan Police Colleague
By MATTHEW ROSENBERG
Published: July 2, 2012


KABUL, Afghanistan — A member of a highly regarded Afghan police force opened fire on British soldiers during an argument, killing three of them as they left a meeting with local elders in southern Afghanistan, Western and Afghan officials said Monday.
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Afghan soldiers and police officers have attacked their American and allied counterparts with increasing frequency in recent years. The assaults, once rare, have become common enough that they are widely referred to here, in shorthand, as “green-on-blue” attacks.

Officials from the NATO-led coalition blame personal differences, not Taliban infiltration, for most of the violence. Some fear that the distrust sown by such attacks is undermining a pillar of the Western exit strategy: preparing Afghan forces to fight on their own by pairing them closely with coalition troops.

Afghan police officers or soldiers have killed 26 coalition service members this year, compared with 35 in all of 2011, according to the coalition.

The latest shooting took place on Sunday in the southern province of Helmand, where the bulk of British forces in Afghanistan are based with a large number of American Marines.

The coalition, as is its custom, released only the barest of details in a written statement late Sunday. It said three service members had been killed but did not specify the location or their nationalities. It also identified the attacker as a man “wearing an Afghan National Civil Order Police uniform,” leaving open the possibility that the assailant was a Taliban infiltrator, not a colleague.

But a spokesman for the Helmand provincial government, Daoud Ahmadi, said Monday that the attacker had been a member of the Civil Order Police and had been fatally wounded in a firefight with British soldiers.

The Civil Order Police is national constabulary force that often supports military operations. Western officials consider the force better trained and disciplined than the regular police force, which is riddled with corruption and drug abuse.

Britain’s Defense Ministry said in a statement that the firefight between its soldiers and the Civil Order Police officer had taken place at a checkpoint in the Nahr-e Saraj district of Helmand. The soldiers were part of a team advising and training the police force, and they had traveled to the checkpoint from a larger base for a meeting, known in Afghanistan as a shura, with local elders.

As they left the shura, the attacker opened fire, and the three were wounded gravely enough that they could not be saved by first aid at the scene, the Defense Ministry said. The ministry did not identify the dead soldiers.

Col. Ghulam Sakhi, who commands Civil Order Police in Helmand, said the shooting, around 5 p.m., came at the end of an argument between British soldiers and the Afghan police.

Coalition and Afghan officials said the attack was under investigation. It was not clear whether each side was running its own inquiry or a joint effort was under way.

On Monday evening, a suicide car bomb exploded in a residential neighborhood on the northern side of Kandahar, the main city in southern Afghanistan, killing at least seven civilians and wounding 23, said Javed Faisal, a spokesman for the governor of Kandahar Province.

Mr. Faisal said the authorities were uncertain whom or what the bomber was targeting; no Afghan, American or allied forces or senior government officials were in the area. He speculated that the explosives may have gone off accidentally.

Taimoor Shah contributed reporting from Kandahar, Afghanistan, and Alan Cowell from London.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/03/w...roops-killed-by-afghan-in-police-uniform.html
 
(CNN) -- Three British troops were shot and killed by a man wearing the uniform of an Afghan national police officer in violence-plagued southern Afghanistan, the British Ministry of Defence said Monday.
They were serving with the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force when they were killed Sunday.
The attack is under investigation, the NATO-led force said.
The British said two of the soldiers were from the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, and the third was serving with the Royal Corps of Signals.
It was unclear whether the attacker was an Afghan police officer or an infiltrator wearing the uniform.
Report: Afghanistan war mishandled Program helps deliver babies safely
The problem of members of the Afghan forces who have turned their weapons on allied soldiers -- so-called "green on blue" attacks -- has repeatedly occurred this year.
In February, a top U.S. lawmaker cited at least 42 attacks by Afghan security forces on their international allies in the past five years.
Rep. Buck McKeon, R-California, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said 39 of the attacks were by members of the Afghan National Security Forces and three were by contractors.
There was at least one more green-on-blue attack in March when two Americans were shot and killed after reports emerged that Qurans had mistakenly been burned by American troops.
In March, Gen. John Allen, commander of the NATO-led force, noted "an erosion of trust that has emerged from this." But he said that the systems the Afghans and coalition had put in place to help stop these attacks before they happen were having an effect.
Allen said coalition officials were working on a new procedure to check the backgrounds of Afghans who sign up for the army or police force, and the Afghans "have taken a lot of steps themselves."
In May, a man wearing an Afghan National Army uniform shot at coalition service members in eastern Afghanistan, killing one of them.
 
Just goes to show, the Army should not be doing police work.
 
It is time to pull NATO soldiers out of Afghanistan and let the Afghans deal with their own problems.
 

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