KABUL, Afghanistan, May 7, 2007

Afghan Who Killed U.S. Troops Mentally Ill

Rocket Attack In Capital Latest Insurgent Violence Which Has Claimed About 1,300 Lives This Year

  • The Pul-e Charkhi prison in Kabul, Afghanistan (shown here in a Dec. 17, 2004 file photo) has been the site of deadly riots and breakouts since being used to house al Qaeda and Taliban suspects.

    The Pul-e Charkhi prison in Kabul, Afghanistan (shown here in a Dec. 17, 2004 file photo) has been the site of deadly riots and breakouts since being used to house al Qaeda and Taliban suspects.  (AP)

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(AP)  Afghanistan's Defense Ministry said Monday that an Afghan soldier who shot and killed two U.S. troops the day before outside a top-security prison was mentally ill.

The gunman was shot dead by other Afghan troops at Pul-e-Charkhi prison, some 20 miles east of Kabul, said Maj. Sheldon Smith, a spokesman for Combined Security Transition Command, which trains Afghan security forces. The shooter also wounded two U.S. soldiers.

Defense Ministry spokesman Zahir Azimi said Monday that the Afghan soldier had been hospitalized twice for mental illness. Azimi said the man had been in the army for a year and a half, and that shortly before the shooting, he had been behaving nervously around his fellow soldiers.

The four American soldiers were working as mentors to Afghan troops providing external security for the prison, Smith said. The prison is being revamped to house Afghans transferred from Guantanamo Bay.

The victims were not identified. According to Smith, all indications are that the shooter was a member of the Afghan National Army, the post-Taliban force trained mainly by the American military.

But he confirmed, U.S. military and the Afghan National Army are working side by side to investigate the incident.

He said the U.S. soldiers were in two vehicles when they were shot.

The victims were not identified, and Smith provided no further details of the incident.

Afghan soldiers with their U.S. trainers have been deployed at the prison in connection with the setting up of a new high-security wing, Smith said.

The wing, which opened last month, is designed to eventually house Afghans transferred from the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The revamp is supposed to improve security at the grim concrete jail, which is infamous among Afghans for tales of torture and appalling conditions dating back to communist rule in the 1970s.

Since the U.S.-led invasion that topped the Taliban, hundreds of al Qaeda and Taliban suspects have been held at Pul-e-Charkhi prison, some of whom have been involved in a series of deadly riots and breakouts.

In other news, a rocket slammed into a street in the Afghan capital Monday, killing a man and wounding five others, while a roadside bomb in the east killed a policeman, officials said.

The rocket struck a street outside an apartment block in the east of the city, said Gen. Ali Shah Paktiawal, the city's police director of criminal investigation.

A resident of the building, who identified himself only as Maliyar, said a 27-year-old neighbor died at a hospital from injuries sustained in the attack. Local police chief Hasib Arian said a young boy was among the five wounded.

In eastern Ghazni province, a roadside bomb hit a police convoy Sunday night, killing one officer and wounding five, said deputy provincial police chief Mohammad Zaman.

Interior Ministry spokesman Zemeri Bashary said 102 policemen have been killed in the past two months, mostly in attacks in the southern and eastern provinces.

Meanwhile, in eastern Khost province, gunmen opened fire on a car in the border district of Gurbuz on Monday, killing a man and his father, said Khost provincial police chief Gen. Mohammad Ayub. The man worked on a U.S. base in the district, he said.

Police have arrested two suspects in the killing and are searching for a third, Ayub said. He did not provide any further details about the victim's work with U.S. troops.

Insurgency-related violence has already claimed about 1,300 lives this year, mostly militants, according to an Associated Press tally of figures from Afghan and Western officials, as U.S. and NATO forces have launched offensives and Taliban-led fighters have stepped up attacks.

An Associated Press tally has counted at least 43 suicide bomb attacks so far this year, which have killed about 100 people. Nearly half of the suicide attacks have left only the bomber dead.

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by rushman71 May 8, 2007 11:34 AM EDT
Bush is crazy enough to be a good Nazi, but not intelligent enough to be a good Satan.
Posted by RandalDS at 05:01 PM : May 07, 2007

I guess you're right on that one. :p
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 May 7, 2007 9:40 PM EDT
Why don't we say it was 'FRIENDLY FIRE'? LOL
Posted by Agnim at 04:51 PM : May 07, 2007

It is said that "He who laughs at everything he says, has a 'fool' for an audience"

(ToolMangler Original)
Reply to this comment
by randalds May 7, 2007 8:01 PM EDT
And here US people are regarding Bush as a Nazi, as Satan, every name in the book.

Posted by rushman71 at 04:43 PM : May 07, 2007

Bush is crazy enough to be a good Nazi, but not intelligent enough to be a good Satan.
Reply to this comment
by agnim May 7, 2007 7:54 PM EDT
"Saddam Hussein killed thousands, Osama bin Laden killed over 3000. Now I see people putting down Bush for killing thousands.
Posted by rushman71 at 04:43 PM : May 07, 2007"

LOL

your 'bush' KILLED HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS
AND KILLED THEM UNPROVOKED!

Iraqis DID NOTHING TO AMERICANS to warrant us KILLING HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF Iraqi women and children! OK?

So please already with the childish comparison. Take it back to kindergarten.
Reply to this comment
by agnim May 7, 2007 7:51 PM EDT
"Afghan Who Killed U.S. Troops Mentally Ill"

LOL

He was just a mental person shooting at random, like Cho.

The fact that his victims were foreign infidels of the great satan played no role in his 'choice' of target.

Why don't we say it was 'FRIENDLY FIRE'? LOL
Reply to this comment
by rushman71 May 7, 2007 7:43 PM EDT
Saddam Hussein killed thousands, Osama bin Laden killed over 3000. Now I see people putting down Bush for killing thousands. Don't forget about the numbers back in the days of JFK/LBJ when they were in power of the Vietnam War. That "war" claimed approx. 58,000 US lives. And here US people are regarding Bush as a Nazi, as Satan, every name in the book. Now I do truly regret voting for that idiot back in 2000, but watching people fussing about this war, and ignoring the facts of VN, is upsetting.
Reply to this comment
by randalds May 7, 2007 7:11 PM EDT
Mentally ill is no defense. Bush is mentally ill and he has slaughtered tens of thousands. I say give him no sympathy either and turn his treasonous as*s over to a world court like we did with the Nazi's after WWII! Let the relatives of all of the people he's murdered in his insane crusade in the Middle-East decide his fate! Perhaps we could hold Bush's trial in Iraq! I'm sure they'd come up with a proper sentence. They seem to be good at doing that to insane dictators, so one more shouldn't be a problem to them.
Reply to this comment
by rushman71 May 7, 2007 6:30 PM EDT
I think ALL these guys in the middle east who are out to kill American soldiers and civilians are "mentally ill". I'm including the Taliban and al Quida. Their pretty *** sad.
Reply to this comment

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