StarTribune.com
as afghanistan 111209

Home | World

Suicide car bomber attacks military convoy on outskirts of Kabul, wounding at least 19

Last update: November 13, 2009 - 5:51 AM

KABUL - A suicide car bomber attempting to strike an international military convoy on the outskirts of Kabul wounded at least 19 people Friday, including nine NATO service members, on a road that has become a frequent target.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid sent The Associated Press a message saying the bombing was carried out by one of its militants.

NATO said the assault occurred on the Jalalabad road, which is used extensively by international forces and is frequently attacked. In August, another suicide bomber targeted a NATO convoy there, killing at least eight people.

The alliance said nine international service members and 10 civilian contractors were wounded in Friday's attack, which occurred near a logistics base for U.S. forces. The Interior Ministry said five civilians had been wounded.

Nabi, a taxi driver, said he was driving down the road when he heard a big bang and everything went dark.

"I just managed to take myself out of the area. I don't know what happened then, but the attack was on the foreigners," said Nabi, who like many Afghans uses one name.

Lt. Col. Todd Vician, a spokesman for NATO, said the bombing was "another attack by insurgents that injured the people of Afghanistan and our personnel who are partnering with the Afghan security forces to bring better development, governance and security to Afghanistan."

"This attack will not deter us from continuing our important mission," he said.

NATO's top commander in Afghanistan, U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, has asked for an extra 40,000 troops to be sent to Afghanistan to bolster the 71,000 international troops already here.

But President Barack Obama has not yet made a decision on sending more troops — a delay that has found an echo in Europe, where countries with forces in the country are weighing whether to send help or bow to public demands for a speedy exit.

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said on Thursday that allied nations have privately pledged more help, but he stopped short of saying that countries would send more troops.

On Friday, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown indicated he believed he could secure commitments for 5,000 more NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Speaking during an interview with the British Broadcasting Corp., Brown said Washington and London need the 43 other nations involved in NATO's International Security Assistance Force to help share the burden.

With 9,000 of its troops in the country, Britain is the second-largest contributor to the international coalition after the United States. But with rising casualties — 232 British soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since 2001 — the war is increasingly unpopular at home. Families and military commanders have blamed deaths on a lack of equipment, and there has been growing criticism that Brown has failed to show tangible benefits of the mission.

In his interview, Brown defended the military campaign, but acknowledged that Britain needed to "adjust our approach" amid rising casualties.

Germany said Friday that it would send more than 100 extra troops to Afghanistan in January.

Defense Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg said during a visit to his country's troops in Afghanistan that the quick-reaction force soldiers would be deployed in the northern province of Kunduz, where most of Germany's 4,365 troops are stationed.

Thirty-six German soldiers have been killed so far in the mission to Afghanistan, and support in Germany for the war is also low.

Separately, a land mine exploded near a police station in Logar province, south of Kabul, killing a member of the Afghan National Police and wounding an Afghan National Army officer Friday, provincial police chief Mustafa Mosseini said.

___

Associated Press writer Amir Shah in Kabul contributed to this report.

Recent World stories

Liberians mourn UN worker killed in October attack on UN house in Afghanistan - November 13, 2009
Liberians mourn UN worker killed in October attack on UN house in Afghanistan - Hundreds of people jammed into a Monrovia church to mourn a Liberian United Nations worker killed in an October attack by Taliban gunmen in Afghanistan's capital. More

Comment on this story   |   Be the first to comment   |  Hide reader comments

Subscribe
Most PopularMost EmailedMost Read
Your Photos and Video

Share photos and videos now

Golf

What a game! Nothing like sweeping the Packers with Brett.

See thousands of photos from other StarTribune.com readers and share your own photos and video today.

Homes

Find Your Next Home

Search realtor represented & for sale by owner homes in the Twin Cities. Plus, find open house listings.