“In total four attackers have been killed. One detonated his explosives-packed vehicle at the gate, a second attacker was shot and killed outside the compound, and two other attackers have been shot and killed inside the compound,” he said.
The interior ministry said three security guards contracted by the UN were injured in the attack.
UN officials in Kabul and Herat confirmed the attack and that there were no deaths or injuries among UN staff, who had taken refuge in a safe bunker. –AFP
*****
This is cool. Lately I have been trying to get a hold of someone with the UN to talk about this attack and who was involved in the defense. I did and low and behold, a PSC called IDG Security was involved in the defense of this compound. What is significant about this is that the UN is using PSC’s in Afghanistan and they are saving lives, contrary to what Karzai or the media might have you believe.
IDG Security is a Nepalese staffed company, composed of former Gurkha and former British officers. Erinys also merged with IDG Security last year and so technically, kudos go to Erinys and their staff as well.
The other point to bring up is that this attack is an exact repeat of prior suicide assaulter type attacks in the past. Although in this case, the suicide assaulters were wearing burqas and pretending to be women. Thanks to the quick thinking of the defenders and effective defenses of the compound, these are now dead suicide assaulters! Do you think the assaulter’s last thoughts as they passed were ‘damn, I was just killed wearing a burqa’? lol
Bravo to IDG Security, and bravo to the UN for using a competent PSC for the defense. –Matt
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Taliban launch attack on U.N. compound in western Afghanistan
By Joshua PartlowSunday, October 24, 2010
KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN – The Taliban launched a midday assault on the United Nations headquarters in western Afghanistan on Saturday, crashing a car bomb into a compound gate to create an opening for suicide bombers disguised as women, according to U.N. and Afghan officials.
The attack was a startling reminder of the Taliban’s readiness to strike at the symbols of foreign presence in Afghanistan, in this case a heavily fortified facility in the relatively peaceful city of Herat, near the Iranian border. Although two Afghan policemen were injured, the attack largely failed, as U.N. guards and Afghan security forces were able to kill the insurgents. No U.N. personnel were hurt.
A thinned-out weekend staff was manning the U.N. offices when the attackers launched rocket-propelled grenades at the compound just before noon and rammed a car bomb into the back gate, U.S. and Afghan officials said. At least three other insurgents, each hiding a suicide vest under a burqa, the head-to-toe cloak worn by many Afghan women, managed to get through the gate before being killed by either guards or police, the officials said.
“This is quite significant,” one U.N. official said. “There was no such direct attack here, as far as I know, for a long time.”
It was the most serious attack on a U.N. facility since October 2009, when insurgents stormed a U.N. guesthouse in Kabul and killed several members of the foreign staff there, prompting the mission to evacuate many employees, change housing arrangements and bolster security.
After Saturday’s violence, the U.N. staff plans to relocate until its offices can be repaired and fortified but said operations in Herat will be unaffected.
“The United Nations will continue to maintain its presence and programs in Herat for the benefit of the population in need and in support of the Afghan authorities,” the mission said in a statement.
Elsewhere in Afghanistan, a New York Times photographer, Joao Silva, suffered serious leg injuries Saturday when he stepped on a mine while on patrol with U.S. troops in Kandahar province’s Arghandab River valley.
Silva, a veteran war photographer from Lisbon who lives in South Africa, was taken for treatment to Kandahar Airfield, the nearest large NATO military base, and was expected to be flown to Germany for further care.
The Arghandab valley is the site of one of the most important U.S. military efforts against the Taliban. The lush, scenic area has long been contested by the Taliban, and U.S. and Afghan forces have recently intensified their efforts there.
In an interview Friday, Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, said of the Arghandab that “the bulk of it has been cleared” of insurgents, but added: “There’s certainly still Taliban in there that have to be rooted out.”
Story here.
Let's say chivalry has no place when it comes to defending yourself. Whether it's a woman in high heels and an evening gown, a woman in a burqa, or a guy dressed as a woman wearing burqa, if they're intent on killing you, then there is no second thinking –you either fight or be killed.
Comment by kanani — Tuesday, October 26, 2010 @ 5:12 AM
Absolutely. The assaulters were probably thinking that the defenders would not fire on women or second guess the target identification. That, and you can hide a lot of stuff under the burqa. In either case, the guards won and the Taliban failed in this battle.
Comment by headjundi — Tuesday, October 26, 2010 @ 6:03 AM