2 US officials hurt in confusing Mexico shooting

An armored U.S. Embassy vehicle is checked by military personal after it was attacked by unknown assailants on the highway leading to the city of Cuernavaca, near Tres Marias, Mexico, Friday, Aug. 24, 2012. / AP Photo/Alexandre Meneghini
(CBS/AP)MEXICO CITY - The Mexican Navy says federal police shot at an embassy vehicle carrying two U.S. government employees after the vehicle came under attack from unidentified gunmen.
The shooting appears to have been a case of a confused gunbattle that broke out on a rural road just south of Mexico City.
The Navy said Friday the embassy personnel were heading down a dirt road to a military installation when a carload of gunmen opened fire on them and chased them, along with a Navy officer accompanying them.
Alerted to the gunfire, a federal police patrol vehicle came to the scene and apparently opened fire. The statement does not make clear whose bullets injured the U.S. workers.
A law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press both men hospitalized, one with a wound to the leg and the other hit in the stomach and hand. State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said they are in stable condition.
The official said the wounded were not agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration or FBI, but did not identify which agency they work for.
Military guards stand in front of an armored U.S. Embassy vehicle attacked by unknown assailants on the highway leading to the city of Cuernavaca, near Tres Marias, Mexico, Friday, Aug. 24, 2012.
/ AP Photo/Alexandre MeneghiniThe U.S. Embassy had no immediate comment.
A Mexican army official said the SUV with diplomatic plates was found after a report about a shootout on the two-lane highway. The army official was not authorized to be quoted by name. He said a Mexican navy captain was also in the vehicle, but was not injured.
The Toyota vehicle was riddled with bullets, most concentrated around the passenger-side window, indicating possible involvement by experienced gunmen.
The shooting occurred on road winding through a mountainous area where drug gangs, common criminals and leftist rebels have been known to be active in the past.
The scene of the shooting was cordoned off and guarded Friday by more than 100 heavily armed marines and soldiers, and the highway was closed. Investigators examined what appear to be shell casings left at the scene.
Popular on CBSNews.com
-
One year after Afghan massacre, villagers work with U.S. troops One year after U.S. Staff Sgt. Robert Bales was accused of slaughtering 16 Afghan civilians, the villagers in the town where the atrocity took place have joined the U.S. special forces stationed there to assist in the fight against the Taliban.
- 50th Paris Air Show 13 Photos
- Italy top court cites "erotic game" hypothesis in Knox case
- Torrential rain devastates Northern India 15 Photos
- Widespread protests in Brazil 23 Photos
- Hungary indicts 98-year-old for Nazi war crimes
- Egypt and Ethiopia try to roll back threats of war
- Protesters clash with Brazil police in Sao Paulo
- Basement living in China 6 Photos
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Can you blame them?
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- "speaking on condition of anonymity" Then there will always be doubt that the information is false... Armor? Is that Swiss Cheese that already has holes. Now O'Booboo will ask for more money to protect people that maybe should not be there. And who says it was a mistake, half the Mexican't Army is paid by the cartels anyway. Queen of Hearts, heads should roll for this...but won't!
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- A confused gun battle. Yeah, must be Mexico.
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Wasn't armored very well was it.
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Armored? The armor must have been supplied by Rumsfeld.
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- enough. time to invade mexico and remove its inept government and kill all drug cartel members. now that would be a war worth fighting.
- reply
-
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Groooovy. You sound like a tough guy so: You first.
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Like we could really invade Mexico. Mexico could more nearly invade us. For the most part the U.S. comprises a population of aging fat consumers who, when they're not watching TV, waddle out to some job to shuffle paper. Sterling Greenwood/Aspen
- See all 4 Replies














