“Massive” blast kills 12 and wounds more than 50 in Afghan province
A spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition said the truck bombing was near the bazaar and many of the Afghan victims were killed
By Richard A. Oppel Jr. and Jawad Sukhanyar
An
attack by two suicide bombers just outside a U.S. military outpost in
Wardak province at daybreak Saturday, Sept. 1, killed at least a dozen
Afghans and wounded 58 others, according to Afghan and U.S. officials.
Several U.S. soldiers were also wounded.
The same
military base suffered a devastating truck bombing last year on the eve
of the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks in New York and
Washington.
That earlier assault on the base, known
as Combat Outpost Sayed Abad, resulted in one of the worst tolls for
foreign troops in a single attack in the war, with 77 Americans wounded
and five Afghans killed, and was attributed to the Haqqani Taliban
network.
The attack proved especially significant
because it was one of a handful of high-profile assaults that led U.S.
officials to publicly accuse Pakistan's premier spy agency of supporting
the Haqqani network in attacking U.S. targets.
According
to Afghan officials, the attack Saturday started with a suicide bomber
on foot detonating his explosives at a nearby police headquarters and
ended with the detonation of a large cache of explosives being driven
toward the base in a truck. The explosions occurred along a tight
stretch of road that is home not only to the military outpost and the
district police headquarters, but also to a crowded shopping bazaar.
A view shows damaged vehicles inside a U.S. base after a twin suicide bomb attack in Wardak province September 1, 2012. The twin suicide bomb attack targeted a NATO base in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, killing eight civilians and four Afghan policemen, local officials said. (Photo: Reuters/Stringer)
A spokesman for the U.S.-led
coalition said the truck bombing was near the bazaar and many of the
Afghan victims were killedthere.
Among the Afghans who died, eight were civilians and four were police officers, Afghan government officials said.
One
Afghan Parliament member from Wardak, Hamida Akbari, placed the death
toll at 14, including six members of the Afghan security forces. The
Afghans who were wounded included a woman, a child and three officers of
the Afghan national spy agency, the National Directorate for Security.
The
Taliban, who in recent weeks have repeatedly denied involvement in
other deaths for which they were blamed by the Afghan authorities,
quickly took responsibility for this attack.
A Taliban spokesman said the target was the military outpost, which he noted was the same base targeted last year.
He neither confirmed nor denied whether the Haqqani network had carried out the latest attack.
The
bombings seemed to follow a clear blueprint: First, a man wearing a
suicide vest and waving a Kalashnikov approached the gate of the
district police headquarters building and opened fire, said the Wardak
police chief, Abdul Qayoum Baqizoy. The police fired back, and the
attacker blew himself up.
According to some
officials, that initial blast did not kill anyone. But the explosion and
the confusion that followed appeared intended to draw attention from
what lurked nearby: A man driving a truck with a far more powerful
payload of explosives.
Baqizoy said he thought the
driver's target was the same police headquarters. But U.S. and NATO
officials said the bomber's true target was the combat outpost. The
truck exploded very close to the base but failed to tear open a hole in
the perimeter wall, officials said.
"It did not
penetrate the exterior wall, and there was no assault force that tried
to exploit the attack," said Maj. Adam Wojack, a spokesman for the
U.S.-led military coalition in Kabul. "It was right in front of the
bazaar, and that's why there were so many civilian casualties." He said a
"very small number" of soldiers were wounded.
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