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ISI and Haqqani Network behind attack on Kabul airport: Afghan official

Devil Soul

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July 18, 2014, 4:36 pm
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KABUL- Afghanistan accused Haqqani Network and Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI) behind the attack on Kabul airport.
Interior ministry spokesman, Sediq Sediqi, told reporters that the attack on Kabul airport was either plotted by Haqqani Network or the Pakistani Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI). Sediqi further added that the attack on Kabul airport was apparently plotted to avenge the coordinated attack on Karachi airport, as Pakistani believes Afghanistan was involved behind the attack.
He said the Haqqani Network, Taliban group and Pakistan’s ISI have continuously attempted to attack the airport in Afghaistan.
According to Sediqi, ISI is keen to stop the international flights in Afghanistan after similar flights were halted in Karachi following the Taliban attack. The attack on Kabul airport was launched by a group of five militants who took their positions inside an under constrution building located close to the airport.
Interior ministry officials said all militants were eliminated during the gun battle with the Afghan security forces and no damages were incurred to airport. The officials also added that the assailant militants were of Pakistani origin as they were speaking in Urdu language.
ISI and Haqqani Network behind attack on Kabul airport: Afghan official
 
haha..no wonder!who else would it be!In some place they get praised so they have to maintain that reputation..:ph34r:
 
Keep killing ISI and Haqqani's dogs. :tup:
Not sure about you lot but we surely are having fun killing Raw stooges in this part of the world, We are killing terrorists on our streets like we kill dogs that go crazy......

So better luck next time my dear

July 18, 2014, 4:36 pm

KABUL- Afghanistan accused Haqqani Network and Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI) behind the attack on Kabul airport.
Interior ministry spokesman, Sediq Sediqi, told reporters that the attack on Kabul airport was either plotted by Haqqani Network or the Pakistani Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI). Sediqi further added that the attack on Kabul airport was apparently plotted to avenge the coordinated attack on Karachi airport, as Pakistani believes Afghanistan was involved behind the attack.
He said the Haqqani Network, Taliban group and Pakistan’s ISI have continuously attempted to attack the airport in Afghaistan.
According to Sediqi, ISI is keen to stop the international flights in Afghanistan after similar flights were halted in Karachi following the Taliban attack. The attack on Kabul airport was launched by a group of five militants who took their positions inside an under constrution building located close to the airport.
Interior ministry officials said all militants were eliminated during the gun battle with the Afghan security forces and no damages were incurred to airport. The officials also added that the assailant militants were of Pakistani origin as they were speaking in Urdu language.
It is very naive of Afghan Govt to accuse Pakistan of wrong doing, when we clearly have given a statement that we are going after every one, so why acting like a cry baby
 
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The Afghans almost sound as hysterical as our other neighbours!
Yep - Afghan intelligence (or lack of) is so effective that they can figure out within hours sometimes that a terrorist attack was planned, funded and launched from Pakistan by XYZ group, yet they somehow can't preempt the same attack despite the fact that it had to have taken weeks or months to plan, and would require alleged Taliban to drive/walk/carry the 'truck/car/cycle/khotha' bomb across the Pakistan-Afghan border and across large parts of Afghanistan before arriving at the target.
 
NO BODY HAVE COURAGE TO DEFEAT PAKISTAN ISI.
INDIANS ALWAYS REMAINS IN DREAM........ HA HA HA HA
 
It is time for Afghan regime to stop blaming PA for their mismanagement and must talk with solid evidence.
I think that we must take a glance over Mr.Karzai's early carrier:
.
After obtaining his Master's degree in India, he moved to neighboring Pakistan to work as a fundraiser for the anti-communist mujahideen during the 1980sSoviet war in Afghanistan.[8] The Mujahideen were backed by the United States, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Iran, and Karzai was a contractor for the U.S.Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) at the time.[9] While Karzai remained in Pakistan during the Soviet intervention,[10] his siblings emigrated to the United States.[8]

Following the withdrawal of Soviet forces, Hamid Karzai returned to Afghanistan in early October 1988 to assist in the Mujahideen victory in Tarinkot. He assisted in rallying Popalzai and other Durrani tribes to oust the regime from the city as well as helped negotiate the defection of five hundred of Najibullah's forces.[11]


Karzai with U.S. Special Forcesduring Operation Enduring Freedom in October 2001.
When Najibullah's Soviet-backed government collapsed in 1992, thePeshawar Accords agreed upon by the Afghan political parties established theIslamic State of Afghanistan and appointed an interim government to be followed by general elections. Karzai accompanied the first mujahideen leaders into Kabul after President Najibullah stepped down in 1992.[10] He served asDeputy Foreign Minister in the government of Burhanuddin Rabbani. Karzai was, however, arrested byMohammad Fahim (Years later Karzai's Vice President) on charges of spying forGulbuddin Hekmatyar in what Karzai claimed was an effort to mediate between Hekmatyar's forces and Rabbani's government. Karzai fled from Kabul in a vehicle provided by Hekmatyar and driven by Gul Rahman.[12]
........................................................................
  1. "Profile:Hamid Karzai". United States:Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). December 2001. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  2. "Hamid Karzai". Academy of Achievement. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  3. "Karzai declared elected president". BBC News. 2 November 2009. Retrieved 31 January 2010.
  4. Burke, Jason (7 March 2008). "Hard man in a hard country". The Guardian (UK). Retrieved 14 March 2009.
  5. Dyck, Jere Van; Afghanistan., Special To The New York Times; The Following Dispatch Was Written By A Freelance Journalist Who Recently Spent Six Weeks In (21 December 1981). "The Afghan Rulers: Fiercely Traditional Tribes". The New York Times (United States). p. 2. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  6. "Office of the President". Afghanistan: Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  7. "Biography - Office of the President". President.gov.af. Retrieved 2014-03-22.
  8. Stockman, Farah (22 May 2005)."Afghan president's brother looks back".Boston Globe. Retrieved 14 April 2009.
  9. Mills, Nick (31 August 2007). Karzai: the failing American intervention and the struggle for Afghanistan (Illustrated ed.). John Wiley and sons. p. 240. ISBN 0-470-13400-3.
  10. Burke, Jason (20 July 2008). "Hard man in a hard country". The Observer(London). Retrieved 14 April 2009.
  11. Tomsen, Peter. "The Wars of Afghanistan: Messianic Terrorism, Tribal Conflicts, and the Failure of Great Powers."
  12. Karzai surrounding himself with anti-US advisers, by Kathy Gannon,
  13. Main source: Wikipedia
 
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