April 4, 2012 | FDD’s Long War Journal
Suicide Bomber Kills 12, Including 3 ISAF Troops, in Afghan Northwest
April 4, 2012 | FDD’s Long War Journal
Suicide Bomber Kills 12, Including 3 ISAF Troops, in Afghan Northwest
A suicide bomber killed 12 people, including three Coalition troops, in an attack at a park in the capital of the northwestern Afghan province of Faryab. The attack occurred less than two weeks after the senior leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan in Afghanistan was killed by Coalition and Afghan forces in the province.
Today's suicide attack took place in the city of Maimana as International Security Assistance Force troops visited a park “to carry out filmed interviews with local residents,” AFP reported. The suicide bomber drove up to the soldiers on a motorcycle and detonated his explosives. The ISAF troops had visited a police headquarters prior to going to the park.
Five Afghan civilians, four Afghan policemen, and three ISAF soldiers are reported to have been killed in the attacks. Dozens of Afghans, including policemen, and four ISAF troops are reported to have been wounded.
The International Security Assistance Force confirmed that three of its soldiers were killed “following an improvised explosive device attack in northern Afghanistan today,” but did not give a specific location or provide the nationalities of the troops. ISAF has a light footprint in Faryab; more than 400 Norwegian soldiers operate in the province.
The Taliban claimed credit for today's attack, according to Pajhwok Afghan News. Taliban spokesman spokesman Qari Yosuf Ahmadi claimed that eight ISAF soldiers were killed and six more were wounded in the attack. The Taliban frequently exaggerate the effects of their operations.
Although the Taliban often claim credit for suicide attacks in the north, some of these attacks are carried out by a key ally, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which is also allied to al Qaeda. Last year, the IMU said that 87 of its commanders and fighters were killed during operations in Afghanistan, including suicide attacks. The IMU claimed credit for the October 2011 suicide assault on the US Provincial Reconstruction Team base in Panjshir, which was initially claimed by the Taliban.
The northern Afghan provinces of Baghlan, Faryab, Kunduz, Sar-i-Pul, and Takhar are known strongholds of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. In early 2011, the International Security Assistance Force noted the location of suicide camps in both Sar-i-Pul and Samangan. The IMU is known to fight alongside the Taliban in Afghanistan and has integrated into the Taliban's shadow government in the north.
Today's suicide attack occurs just nine days after ISAF and Afghan special operations teams killed Makhdum Nusrat, the top commander for Afghan operations of the al Qaeda and Taliban-linked Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, during a raid in Faryab's Shirin Tagab district. Yesterday, ISAF and Afghan forces targeted the IMU's top bomb maker in Afghanistan during a raid in Kunduz.