Afghan security forces keeping watch at the site of a suicide attack in Kabul yesterday.

A suicide car bomber killed two US troops and a Polish soldier in an attack on a convoy near the US embassy in Kabul yesterday, the Nato-led coalition said, one of the worst attacks on international forces in the Afghan capital in months.

The attack near the heavily fortified embassy wounded 13 Afghan civilians nearby. It came amid a months-long political stalemate and an emboldened insurgency, with a presidential election still unresolved as most foreign combat troops prepare to leave by the end of the year.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the bombing on the main road leading to Kabul’s international airport, not far from the sprawling US embassy compound that is also home to other members of the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) coalition.

In a text message to journalists, a Taliban spokesman said the suicide bomber, identified only as Bilal, had been lying in wait for foreign troops in a car packed with explosives.

Two of the three killed were American military personnel, a US defence department official confirmed yesterday in Washington.

Poland’s military identified the third victim as Rafal Celebudzki, a platoon commander who had also served in Iraq. Two other Polish soldiers were wounded.

Afghan Deputy Interior Minister Mohammad Ayub Salangi said on Twitter a suicide car bomber had targeted a convoy of vehicles carrying foreign troops.

The blast tore through cars and shattered shop windows on the road a few hundred metres from the main embassy gate.

Kabul police spokesman Hashmat Stanekzai said 13 Afghan civilians were wounded and 17 nearby cars damaged.

Ambulances arrived within minutes of the blast during the morning rush hour at about 8am (0330 GMT).

“It was a huge blast,” said wounded bystander Haji Awal Gul, his shirt splattered with blood as he stood on the roadside.

In western Herat province, one US soldier was killed when an unidentified member of the Afghan security forces turned on his trainers late on Monday, the latest incident in a string of “green-on-blue” attacks.

A Western official, who asked not to be identified, said the US soldier was killed when the Afghan threw a hand grenade at his trainers.

ISAF did not confirm the exact details of the attack. An ISAF statement yesterday said the US service member was killed when an individual wearing an Afghan army uniform “turned his weapon against ISAF members”.

Also overnight, two suicide bombers set ablaze 26 fuel tankers in an attack on a customs post in eastern Afghanistan near a border crossing into Pakistan, Afghanistan’s TOLO media reported yesterday.

One of the attackers detonated explosives he was carrying while the other was killed in an ensuing gun battle, the report on TOLOnews.com quoted Afghan officials as saying.

 

 

 

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