CBS/AP/ December 31, 2009, 4:33 AM

Base Chief among 7 CIA Employees Killed

Last updated 2:25 p.m. Eastern

The CIA said Thursday that seven of its employees were killed and six others wounded in a suicide bombing at a base in Afghanistan. The Associated Press has learned that one of them was the chief of the CIA's post in Afghanistan's southeastern Khost Province.

The CBSNews.com Special Report: AfghanistanNo further information about the victims would be released," the CIA director said, "due to the sensitivity of their mission and other ongoing operations."President Barack Obama said the killed CIA employees come from a "long line of patriots" whose courageous service has helped to thwart terrorist plots and save lives.

In a letter to CIA employees released by the agency, Mr. Obama said the U.S. would not be able to maintain its freedom and security without their service. He also noted that the spy agency has been tested "as never before" since the Sept. 11 attacks.

The president, who is in Hawaii for the holidays, wrote to tell them they "have helped us understand the world as it is, and taken great risks to protect our country."

Separately, former CIA officials said an agent who ran the agency's base in Khost was among those killed by the attacker, who detonated a bomb-laden vest inside the compound.

The former officials said the Khost chief was the mother of three. As base chief she would have directed and coordinated CIA operations and intelligence gathering in the province, a hotbed of Taliban and insurgent activity because of its proximity to Pakistan's lawless tribal region.

The former officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

CBS News correspondent David Martin reports Afghan soldiers and civilians are present at almost every American outpost since one of the chief principals of the U.S. strategy is to partner with the Afghans. According to Christine Fair of Georgetown University, some of them may actually be working for the Taliban.

"They have really become a vehicle of infiltration for the Taliban," Fair said. "This is most certainly a vulnerability in our strategy going forward in trying to hand over security to the Afghans," said Fair; "If we don't really have a way of figuring out who we can trust."

An Afghan official in Khost said about 200 Afghans have been contracted by the U.S. to take care of security at the base. They are usually deployed on the outer ring of its walls, although some work inside, the official said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

"It's not the first time that Afghan forces have conducted such an attack to kill Americans or foreigners," the Taliban statement said, citing the killing of an American soldier and the wounding of two Italians this week in Badghis province. NATO has provided no details of that incident, but Afghan Gen. Jalander Shah Bahnam said an Afghan soldier opened fire on a base in the province's Bala Murghab district.

Separately, four Canadian soldiers and a journalist embedded in their unit were killed Wednesday by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan's south, the bloodiest single incident suffered by that country's military in 2009.

Michelle Lang, a 34-year-old health reporter with the Calgary Herald, was the first Canadian journalist to die in Afghanistan. She arrived in the country just two weeks ago.

Asked about the suicide attack, NATO said only that FOB Chapman, in Khost, is used by provincial reconstruction teams, which consist of both soldiers and civilians, and other personnel.

A spokesman in Kabul for the international coalition force said no U.S. or NATO troops were killed in the afternoon explosion. The attack was the bloodiest for Americans since eight soldiers were killed in an insurgent attack on a base in eastern Afghanistan on Oct. 3.

In the south, NATO said the four Canadian troops and the reporter died when their armored vehicle hit a bomb while on an afternoon patrol south of Kandahar city. It was the third-deadliest day for Canadians in Afghanistan since the war began.

Michelle Lang "was one of those journalists who always wanted to get to the bottom of every story so this was an important trip for her," said a Calgary Herald colleague, Colette Derworiz.

Targeted Killing of Journalists Up in '09

The military has not disclosed the names of the Canadian troops because relatives have not all been notified.

"We are all very saddened to hear this tragic news," Alberta Health and Wellness Minister Ron Liepert said in a statement. "Michelle covered health issues with professionalism, accuracy and thoroughness. She was tenacious in her quest to inform Albertans, and for her diligence she was very well respected."

Brig. Gen. Daniel Menard, commander of coalition forces in Kandahar, said the soldiers were conducting a community security patrol in order to gather information about daily life in the area and how to maintain security.

Separately Wednesday, NATO questioned Afghan reports that international troops killed 10 civilians, including children, in a weekend attack that prompted hundreds of angry Afghan protesters to burn an effigy of President Obama and chant "death" to America.

The head of an investigative team appointed by President Hamid Karzai told The Associated Press that eight students between the ages of 12 and 14 were among the dead discovered in a village house in a remote section of Kunar province in eastern Afghanistan. NATO said late Wednesday that while there was no direct evidence to substantiate the claims, the international force had requested and welcomed a joint investigation to reach an "impartial and accurate determination" of what happened in the attack.

Conflicting accounts of what occurred during the fighting in Kunar's Narang district prompted an emotional outcry over civilian deaths, one of the most sensitive issues for international troops fighting the more than eight-year-old war. Although insurgents are responsible for the deaths of far more civilians, those blamed on coalition forces spark the most resentment and undermine the fight against militants. With 37,000 more U.S. and NATO troops being deployed to the battle zone, concern over civilian casualties is unlikely to ease anytime soon.

Several hundred Afghans demonstrated in Kabul and in the eastern city of Jalalabad, where the likeness of Obama, adorned with a small American flag, was burned on a pole held above demonstrators.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
45 Comments Add a Comment
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libcbs says:
WHAT IS OBAMA DOING ABOUT THIS? THE LIBBIES COMPLAIN ABNOUT CHENEY, AT LEAST HE'S TRYING TO HELP OUR COUNTRY AND HE'S NOT GETTING PAID FOR IT!
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noloyalisti replies:
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We have become the terrorists! And what is Obama doing about that? Escalating the fraudulent War OF Terror. Making more enemies and more terrorists by the minute. Invoking 911, perhaps planned by this very CIA, for political and financial gain for the corporate masters of America.
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nowhiningallowed says:
Another terror attack against the U.S. and now members of the CIA. Inside job.
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wyodutch says:
They kill our merceneries... We kill their kids. And we have the gall to call them "terrorists". Shame on us.
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"The United Nations said Thursday that a weekend raid by foreign troops in a tense eastern Afghan province killed eight local students and warned against nighttime actions by coalition forces because they often cause civilian deaths. The Afghan government said its investigation has established that all 10 people killed Sunday in a remote village in Kunar province were civilians. Its officials said that eight of those killed were schoolchildren aged 12-14."

NATO officials initially said all the dead were insurgents, but later backed off by saying there was no evidence to substantiate the claims that they were civilians. They requested a joint Afghan-NATO investigation to reach an "impartial and accurate determination" of what happened.
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wyodutch says:
Same thing the Afghan freedom fighters did to the Russian kids... Swear allegiance to 'em, then ram a bomb up their patoot.
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Suppose Afghanistan invaded America and an Afghan soldier was on a tank passing through an American street, waving his gun at the people, threatening them, raiding and trashing houses. Would you accept that? Well.. would ya, punk?
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brianbwb-2009 replies:
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Sure they would accept it, because they would turn tail and run if they had to actually fight for themselves, they can only send other people's kids to back up their arrogance.

In fact all the Afghanistani tank rider need do is shave, put on a tie, and wave a GOP elephant flag, and they would fall down in worship.
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brianbwb-2009 says:
Funny how the traditional definition of "terrorist" has changed.

It used to mean,

"United States Law Code ? the law that governs the entire country ? contains a definition of terrorism embedded in its requirement that Annual Country reports on Terrorism be submitted by the Secretary of State to Congress every year. (From U.S. Code Title 22, Ch.38, Para. 2656f(d)

(d) Definitions
As used in this section?
(1) the term ?international terrorism? means terrorism involving citizens or the territory of more than 1 country;
(2) the term ?terrorism? means premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents;"

Get that term "non-combatants?

So how does the bombing of military targets, including agents assisting the military, become an act of terrorism?? Neither the soldiers or the CIA agents can be described as non-combatant, as they are both engaged in hostile acts against an occupied people.
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brianbwb-2009 replies:
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YoureSoWrong16

I didn't write it, the quote was taken verbatim from the law.

You did of course read the part that said, "(From U.S. Code Title 22, Ch.38, Para. 2656f(d)", did you not? Or perhaps the words had too many letters for you to understand?

People usualy call things they cannot understand gibberish.

Oh yeah, I forget, neos don't recognize law when they are inconvenienced by it.
brianbwb-2009 replies:
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To YoureSoWrong16

Too much for your brain, huh? That is what people usually refer to as gibberish, that which they cannot understand.

As for treason, seems you cannot read the words "From U.S. Code Title 22, Ch.38, Para. 2656f(d)" It is the law son.

"Ch.38" means chapter 38, "Para." means paragraph. Try it again s l o w l y, you can move your lips if need be.
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BrianWX328m says:
My 98-yo grandma in her iron lung is more qualified to be head of CIA than Panetta. What a total bozo this loser is.
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superdem1 says:
The report to the Generals was exposed this week, it says the "country" of Afghanistan exists only on paper, it is really a patchwork of tribal areas ruled by thugs, one of the most corrupt places on earth, where your friends by day betray you at night, where the "army" we've been training for ten years doesn't show up and never will, where there is no democratic tradition and where one is not wanted. We didn't invent democracy, by the way, the ancient Greeks did. Alexander tried to bring it to the Afghans centuries ago, and they wanted no part. So - our "mission" in Afghanistan is doomed, but many Americans will die and much money will be wasted until someone somewhere down the line will do what President Obama should have done, and pull the plug. By the way, everything said about the Taliban was said about the Vietnamese, now we vacation there. And to think all we had to do was get out of their way and let them have the government they wanted. Defend America, yes. Rule the world, no.
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taxpayingvoter says:
I was in Viet Nam and the socalled south Viet Namese would fight with us during the day and at night fight against us. people say, how do you know this. A man that was my helper at the base during the day was a part of the attack that he and his buddies tried on us. He was there during the day to locate targets for them to attack. I personally know that this happened because I during the attack I dropped one of them. It was quite the surprise when I turned the body over and there was my helper.
So the moral of this story is, know your enemies even if they are dressed like a friend. It is a common tactic to do such things, but it is also the American way of not seeing these things that will bring us down
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quapawsix says:
Sounds like these illiterate desert dwellers know how to wage a war to me and it also sounds like they have pretty good intelligence if they were able to take out the CIA.
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steeepe says:
The cure for suicide bombings is to educate the fools that there is no glorious life after death with dozens of virgins waiting for them. As long as people have these ridiculous superstitious beliefs justified by not a scintilla of evidence, we will have to deal with zealots anxious to die for some illusion of life after death. The sad joke is on them, and others suffer because of their idiocy.
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