Afghan NATO base attacked, 14 killed

Afghan NATO base attacked, 14 killed
Updated 03 June 2012
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Afghan NATO base attacked, 14 killed

Afghan NATO base attacked, 14 killed

KABUL: A suicide truck bomber attacked a US-run base yesterday, sparking clashes that killed up to 15 people in eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistani border, officials said.
NATO’s US-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said none of its personnel was killed in the attack in Khost province, a Taleban flashpoint that borders Pakistan.
The Taleban militia, which is leading a 10-year insurgency against foreign troops and the Kabul government, claimed responsibility for the attack.
But the precise details of what happened were murky.
An Afghan security official told AFP that the bomber drove a truck packed with explosives into the outer security checkpost of Forward Operating Base Salerno, which is run by the US military.
“Initial information shows that seven Afghans have been killed and 13 others injured,” the official told AFP. According to the official, the victims were Afghan workers involved in a construction project at the base.
But Khost provincial police chief Sardar Mohammad Zazai later told AFP that only three attackers were killed as they stormed the base.
“Four civilians were injured when the roof of a nearby house collapsed as a result of the explosion,” Zazai said, adding that the bodies of three attackers had also been recovered.
ISAF, however, said 14 insurgents were killed. It later confirmed the death of one Afghan civilian, but released no further details.
A spokesman for the Taleban claimed that a “large number” of foreign soldiers were killed, but the militia is known to exaggerate its claims.
“One of our mujahideen rammed a vehicle packed with 10 tons of explosives into a NATO base in Khost city and detonated the truck near the restaurant of the base,” said Taleban spokesman Zabiullah Muhahid to AFP.
FOB Salerno is close to FOB Chapman, another US-run base in Khost where an Al-Qaeda triple agent blew himself up killing seven CIA agents and his Jordanian handler in December 2009, the deadliest attack on the US intelligence agency since 1983.
On Aug. 28, 2010, NATO said about two dozen Taleban militants were killed in a failed attempt to storm both US-run bases in a city in eastern Afghanistan, NATO said.
Khost is one of the most volatile parts of the country.
It shares a porous border with Pakistan’s tribal belt, which lies outside government control, and where US officials say the Taleban and Al-Qaeda have carved out rear bases for operations in Afghanistan.
Khost province borders Pakistan, which is widely believed to be a key source of fighters, funds and supplies for the Taleban.