Three US troops killed in Afghan 'insider attack'
Afghan soldier kills three US troops on the same day an Italian soldier dies in a grenade attack.
KABUL:
An Afghan soldier shot dead three US troops on Saturday in the east of the country, the latest "insider attack" to shake efforts by the two armies to work together to defeat the Taliban insurgency.
The killings in Paktika province came on the same day that one Italian soldier died and three others were wounded when a grenade was thrown into their armoured vehicle in the western province of Farah.
Scores of foreign soldiers have been killed in insider attacks in Afghanistan, breeding fierce mistrust and threatening to derail the training of local forces to take over security duties ahead of Nato's withdrawal next year.
The threat has become so serious that foreign soldiers working with Afghan forces are regularly watched over by so-called "guardian angel" troops to provide protection from their supposed allies.
The Paktika provincial government issued a statement saying "a verbal dispute erupted" between the Afghan soldier and a US soldier in the district of Khair Kot.
It said the Afghan man killed three US troops serving in the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and wounded three others before being shot himself.
"Initial information indicates that the incident followed an argument, and the soldier was not connected with the armed opposition," the statement added.
ISAF officials say that most insider attacks stem from personal grudges and cultural misunderstandings rather than Taliban insurgent plots.
An ISAF spokesperson confirmed the incident, and military officials in Kabul told AFP that the three dead soldiers were from the United States.
Afghan soldiers and police are taking on responsibility for battling the militants from 100,000 Nato combat troops who will leave by the end of 2014 -- 13 years after a US-led invasion brought down the Taliban regime.
In Farah province, the Italian soldier was killed and three others were wounded when a grenade was thrown into their vehicle, officials said.
"Today at around 10.30am, an enemy on a motorcycle threw a grenade on a convoy of Italian forces who were driving on a patrol in Farah city," Abdul Rahman Zhowandi, Farah provincial spokesperson, told AFP.
The Italian defence ministry and military said the attack happened as the convoy was returning to base.
So far this year, 85 ISAF soldiers have died in Afghanistan, according to the independent casualties website. In 2012, 402 died, down from a peak of 711 in 2010.
Casualty rates in the Afghan security forces have risen by 15-20 per cent in the last year or two, officials say, though exact figures are not released.
On Saturday, the government said its forces had retaken one of the five districts still ruled by the Taliban.
Soldiers and police moved into the centre of Waygal district in the mountainous eastern province of Nuristan overnight after two days of fighting, interior ministry spokesperson Sediq Sediqqi told reporters in Kabul.
He vowed that the remaining insurgent strongholds, in Helmand, Ghazni and Zabul provinces, would be won back before presidential elections next April.
However the insurgents still wield influence over much of the rest of the country, and fears are growing the national security forces will be unable to provide security after the departure of Nato troops.
An Afghan soldier shot dead three US troops on Saturday in the east of the country, the latest "insider attack" to shake efforts by the two armies to work together to defeat the Taliban insurgency.
The killings in Paktika province came on the same day that one Italian soldier died and three others were wounded when a grenade was thrown into their armoured vehicle in the western province of Farah.
Scores of foreign soldiers have been killed in insider attacks in Afghanistan, breeding fierce mistrust and threatening to derail the training of local forces to take over security duties ahead of Nato's withdrawal next year.
The threat has become so serious that foreign soldiers working with Afghan forces are regularly watched over by so-called "guardian angel" troops to provide protection from their supposed allies.
The Paktika provincial government issued a statement saying "a verbal dispute erupted" between the Afghan soldier and a US soldier in the district of Khair Kot.
It said the Afghan man killed three US troops serving in the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and wounded three others before being shot himself.
"Initial information indicates that the incident followed an argument, and the soldier was not connected with the armed opposition," the statement added.
ISAF officials say that most insider attacks stem from personal grudges and cultural misunderstandings rather than Taliban insurgent plots.
An ISAF spokesperson confirmed the incident, and military officials in Kabul told AFP that the three dead soldiers were from the United States.
Afghan soldiers and police are taking on responsibility for battling the militants from 100,000 Nato combat troops who will leave by the end of 2014 -- 13 years after a US-led invasion brought down the Taliban regime.
In Farah province, the Italian soldier was killed and three others were wounded when a grenade was thrown into their vehicle, officials said.
"Today at around 10.30am, an enemy on a motorcycle threw a grenade on a convoy of Italian forces who were driving on a patrol in Farah city," Abdul Rahman Zhowandi, Farah provincial spokesperson, told AFP.
The Italian defence ministry and military said the attack happened as the convoy was returning to base.
So far this year, 85 ISAF soldiers have died in Afghanistan, according to the independent casualties website. In 2012, 402 died, down from a peak of 711 in 2010.
Casualty rates in the Afghan security forces have risen by 15-20 per cent in the last year or two, officials say, though exact figures are not released.
On Saturday, the government said its forces had retaken one of the five districts still ruled by the Taliban.
Soldiers and police moved into the centre of Waygal district in the mountainous eastern province of Nuristan overnight after two days of fighting, interior ministry spokesperson Sediq Sediqqi told reporters in Kabul.
He vowed that the remaining insurgent strongholds, in Helmand, Ghazni and Zabul provinces, would be won back before presidential elections next April.
However the insurgents still wield influence over much of the rest of the country, and fears are growing the national security forces will be unable to provide security after the departure of Nato troops.