Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

Details still coming in. This is the highest ranking casuality for US army and that also by an Afghan soldier and AFTER the end of Afghan war. Its ironic.

For now the officials are not giving much details but journalists have dived all into it so i’m sure we’ll know more shortly.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/06/world/asia/afghanistan-attack.html?emc=edit_na_20140805&nlid=50181468&_r=0

American Major General Reported Killed in Afghanistan

By MATTHEW ROSENBERG and HARIS KAKARAUG. 5, 2014

A NATO soldier opened fire toward journalists near the main gate of Camp Qargha on Tuesday after a shooting at the military training academy outside Kabul.

KABUL, Afghanistan — A United States Army major general was killed on Tuesday by an Afghan soldier, shot at close range at a military training academy on the outskirts of Kabul, an official of the American-led coalition and Afghan media reported Tuesday. The officer was the highest-ranking member of the American military to die in hostilities in the Afghanistan war.](http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/06/world/asia/afghanistan-attack.html?emc=edit_na_20140805&nlid=50181468&_r=0#story-continues-1)

The coalition official, who spoke on condition of anonymity and would not release the name of the major general, said an unspecified number of other service members of the American-led coalition and Afghan soldiers, including a senior Afghan commander were also shot. Their conditions were not known.
Other details of the shooting were sketchy, and the coalition official would only confirm that “an incident” had taken place at the Afghan National Army Officer Academy.
Tensions at the camp ran high in the immediate aftermath of the shooting, which took place around noon, and foreign troops appeared to be on edge, fearful of another attack.
Massoud Hossaini, a photographer for The Associated Press, said that he arrived at the camp’s gate ahead of other journalists, and just as coalition armored vehicles were pulling out of the compound. A coalition soldier manning the roof-mounted gun on one of the vehicles shouted for Mr. Hossaini to “get away,” and then fired an apparent warning shot.
“I don’t know what he fired. It was fired near our car,” he said, adding that he left the scene straight away.
The Afghan Defense Ministry said in a statement that a “few people were wounded” in the shooting, and that they had been immediately evacuated to a hospital. It described the attacker as “wearing Afghan National Army uniform,” which has long been a standard description offered after Afghan troops attack their foreign counterparts.
Other Afghan and coalition officials said they believed the shooter was an Afghan soldier. The coalition, in its brief statement, said the incident had involved “local Afghan and ISAF troops,” using the initials for the International Security Assistance Force, the formal name of the NATO-led coalition.
Sher Alam, an Afghan soldier guarding the entrance to the academy, located at Camp Qargha, said that senior Afghan and coalition officers had been meeting there on Tuesday, and that reports from inside the camp indicated that a number of the foreign officers were shot in the attack. He said that soon after the shooting, coalition helicopters landed inside the academy to evacuate the victims.
Tuesday’s shooting was the first so-called insider attack in Afghanistan in months. Such attacks, in which Afghan troops open fire on unsuspecting coalition forces, at one point posed a serious challenge to the war effort, sowing distrust and threatening to upend the American-led training mission that is vital to the long-term strategy for keeping the Taliban at bay.
Though the number of attacks has dropped sharply since 2012, when dozens occurred, they remain a persistent threat for coalition troops serving alongside Afghan forces.
Afghan and American commanders have said that they believe most of the insider attacks that have taken place were the work of ordinary soldiers who had grown alienated and angry over the continued presence of foreign troops here, and not carried out by Taliban fighters planted in Afghan units.
The Taliban, which often takes credit for insider attacks, had no immediate comment on Tuesday. Zabiullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the insurgents, said he was still trying to collect information about the incident.
But, he added, the Taliban had many people inside the camp, and that one of their loyalists could have been responsible for the attack.

Ahmad Shakib and Jawad Sukhanyar in Kabul contributed reporting.

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

Friendly fire… :snooty:

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

Americans can pretend to be what ever they want in their minds, but for population at large they will remain occupation forces.

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

May ALLAH grant him a high rank in Hell.

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

Its an unfortunate event and we cannot feel good on any killing but I hope US realizes there is an enormous amount of hatred against them everywhere and their foreign policy is the prime responsible for that. They gotto stop meddling in other countries' affairs as the first step to fix that.

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

A german General is also among those who are injured. Its reported that one of the afghan soldiers opened fire on NATO army officials who were on a visit to the site of a training camp. There are mostly americans among 15 wounded.

(http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/05/us-afghanistan-attacks-idUSKBN0G51BQ20140805)

U.S. general killed, German general wounded in Afghan attack: officials

BY HAMID SHALIZI AND JESSICA DONATI

KABUL Tue Aug 5, 2014 4:03pm EDT

(Reuters) - A U.S. general was killed and more than a dozen people were wounded, including a German general, in the latest insider attack by a man believed to be an Afghan soldier, U.S., German and Afghan officials said on Tuesday.
The slain general, whose identity was not immediately released by the Pentagon, was believed to be the most senior U.S. military official killed in action in Afghanistan since the war there began in 2001.
Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby told reporters that “many were seriously wounded” and the gunman was killed in the attack, which took place on Tuesday at the Marshal Fahim National Defense University, a training center in Kabul.
The attack raised fresh questions about the ability of NATO soldiers to train and advise Afghan security forces as western nations gradually withdraw. The U.S. and German generals were on a routine visit, the Pentagon said.
A U.S. official said the gunman fired on the foreign soldiers using a light machinegun. Afghanistan’s Defense Ministry described him as a “terrorist in army uniform.”
The German military said its general was one of 14 coalition troops wounded in Tuesday’s attack. It said his life was not in danger. Seven Americans and five British troops were among the wounded, an Afghan official said.
Past insider attacks have eroded trust while straining foreign efforts to train Afghanistan’s 350,000-strong security force and prepare them to fight the Taliban once most U.S. and NATO forces depart.
U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel spoke by phone with General Joe Dunford, who commands U.S. and international troops in Afghanistan, about the incident, Kirby said. He said the shooting was being investigated jointly by Afghan authorities and the international military coalition that is winding down its long mission in Afghanistan.
The Afghan president was quick to condemn the attack, saying the delegation had been visiting the facility to help build Afghanistan’s security forces.
The Taliban says insider attacks reflect their ability to infiltrate the enemy. International military coalition officials say the incidents often arise over misunderstandings or altercations between troops.
In 2012, dozens of incidents forced international troops to take measures to reduce interaction with their Afghan partners. Since then, the number of insider attacks has fallen sharply.
Like other western nations, the United States is planning to leave a residual force in Afghanistan after the NATO mission ends this year, in part to support Afghan forces. But U.S. officials say that first they must sign a bilateral troop deal, which cannot be finalized until Afghanistan resolves an election dispute and confirms its new president.
In a similar attack on Tuesday, several people were wounded in eastern Paktia province when a policeman opened fire on international and Afghan forces, police chief Zalmay Oryakhil said.
Adding to the tension, a NATO air strike hit a vehicle carrying civilians in western Herat province, local officials said, killing four members of a family returning from a wedding, including two children.
(Reporting by Missy Ryan in Washington, Sabine Siebold in Berlin, Krista Mahr in Kabul, Jalil Ahmad Rezaee in Herat and Ahmad Sultan in Gardez;

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

When did the afghan war end? :hmmm:

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

In 2001 Taliban was the major force in afghanistan, in 2014 they still are, so what did these NATO coalition achieved with full support of neighbours? i dont think taliban will let american leave that easily. May be they want chaddi of americans as well. :hehe:Now these hollywood machos must have known that it is different ball game in the field. Surah Maida 5:68

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

^ not to forget the allied forces wanted to include Taliban in 'new government' on their terms, which probably fell on its face as well.

Re: Breaking: US major general killed by Afghan soldier

All the inside attacks from ANA on NATO are from pashtun soldiers, thats why more tajiks are trusted and recruited.....