Taliban Says Kabul Cafe Attack Was Payback for Earlier Strike4
Taliban Says Kabul Cafe
Attack Was Payback for Earlier Strike4
PLAY VIDEO
The Scene After a Bombing in Kabul
Three
Taliban suicide bombers struck a restaurant popular with Westerners in downtown
Kabul, setting off a blast that killed more than 20 people.
In
their statement, the Taliban said they picked a restaurant frequented by
“high-ranking foreigners” where alcohol was served. The attack, one of the most
significant on Western civilians since the start of the war in 2001, occurred
in the heart of one of Kabul’s most secure districts, very close to many
embassies and coalition military bases.KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban claimed
responsibility Saturday for an attack Friday on a popular Kabul cafe that
killed 21 people, mostly Western civilians, saying it was in retaliation for a
coalition airstrike earlier in
the week in which a number of Afghan civilians had died in a village north of
Kabul.
Western
officials said they were trying to confirm the Taliban’s stated motive for the
coordinated attack, which occurred just two days after the airstrike and would
have required extensive planning. A suicide bomber had cleared a path for two
gunmen who stormed in and fired on diners, the police said.
Westerners
who died in Friday’s attack came from America, Canada, Russia, Lebanon and
other countries, and included the head of the International Monetary Fund in
Afghanistan and the head of political affairs at the United Nations here, both
highly regarded officials who had spent years in the country. Two Americans
working at the American University in Afghanistan were also killed in the
attack, the university said in a statement Saturday.
Afghan security forces helped a man
wounded Friday in an attack on Taverna du Liban, a Kabul restaurant. Many
embassies are in the neighborhood.
“The
attack was in retaliation to the massacre carried out by foreign invaders 2
days earlier in Parwan province’s Siyah Gerd district, where the enemy
airstrikes destroyed up to 10 homes, razed several orchards as well as killing
and wounding up to 30 innocent civilians, mostly defenseless women and
children,” according to the Taliban statement.
After
waves of condolences and condemnations over both attacks — from the
international coalition, the United Nations, diplomats and ordinary Afghans —
the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, whose relationship with the Americans has
been strained in recent months over the signing of a long-term security
contract, released a statement of his own.
Mr.
Karzai expressed sympathy for the victims of the cafe attack but also seemed to
equate it with the airstrike, which had been called in by Afghan and American
forces who were under fire.
“The
war on terror will bear fruit when victims and terrorists are distinguished
from each other and the elements of terror are fought against,” said Mr.
Karzai, who appointed a committee to investigate the civilian casualties from
the strike. “If NATO, led by the United States, wants to be Afghan people’s
ally, they should target terrorism.”
The
head of the Ministry of Interior, which oversees the Afghan police, suspended
the commander and intelligence officer in charge of the district where the restaurant
is and placed them under investigation.
Kabul
appeared to return to normal Saturday, with a slightly heavier police presence
visible along its traffic-choked streets, especially near the roundabout where
the cafe attack occurred. While bombings are not uncommon in Kabul, the extent
of the damage and the targeting of Western civilians raised alarms across the
country.
Some
international organizations tightened security, clamping down on the modest
freedom of movement enjoyed by foreigners working in Kabul. United Nations
officials, meeting privately, vowed not to adopt a “bunker mentality” in
response to the attacks, which claimed the lives of four if its personnel,
including two from the United Nations Children’s Fund.
It is
thought that the only people who escaped the cafe attack were local employees
of the restaurant, some of whom jumped through a second-floor window.
The
chief political affairs officer for the United Nations in Afghanistan, Vadim
Nazarov, a longtime official with the agency, was killed in the attack,
according to two people who spoke on condition of anonymity because the
information had not yet been made public. Mr. Nazarov, a Russian, was highly
regarded for his years spent in Afghanistan and his understanding of the Afghan
political context.
The International Monetary Fund
said its representative in Afghanistan, Wabel Abdallah, was
also among those killed. Mr. Abdallah, 60, had served in Afghanistan since 2008
and had managed to forge a good working relationship with Afghan officials
despite a series of scandals that
left many Western officials at odds with their Afghan counterparts.
The
Taliban also claimed to have killed a high-ranking German official, but the
German Foreign Ministry in Berlin, reached Saturday, said it was still working
to confirm that.
Senior
officials at the American University in Afghanistan convened for a briefing
Saturday morning to review security procedures, but decided to proceed with an
upcoming student orientation and academic activities.
“That’s
how our colleagues would have wanted it,” said Dr. Timothy Saffary, the
school’s chief academic officer.
One
American killed in the attack had recently joined the political science faculty
at the university, while the other worked in student affairs, according to the
university’s statement.
The
attack on the lightly guarded restaurant was a departure for the Taliban, which
have historically targeted heavily fortified government compounds and high-profile
symbols of the Western presence in Afghanistan, like the American Embassy and
a building believed to house the Central
Intelligence Agency station in Kabul.
Those
attacks, while generating heavy news media attention, have often been far less
successful in generating heavy casualties. Typically, Afghan civilians who
happen to be in the vicinity are the victims. A Taliban bombing this month at
the entrance to Camp Eggers, a large base for the American-led
military coalition in the center of Kabul, did not inflict any casualties, for
instance. The base is less than a mile from the restaurant, Taverna du Liban.
The
restaurant, which serves Lebanese food and has a clientele made up largely of
expatriates, had almost none of the security enjoyed by official installations,
like concrete blast walls or checkpoints blocking off the street it is on. It
is also one of the few establishments in the city on the approved list by a
number of international agencies.
The
initial blast appeared to have been powerful. It was heard miles away and shook
windows in the neighborhood, which is home to numerous embassies and shops that
serve Western aid workers, journalists and other foreign civilians who live in
Kabul.
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