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http://latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-fg-afghan-attack31-2009dec31,0,5154434.story

Afghanistan suicide bombing kills 8 CIA officers
The Taliban takes responsibility for the explosion at a U.S. base in 
Khowst province where the agency has a major presence. No U.S. or NATO 
military personnel are hurt.

By Greg Miller and Laura King

December 31, 2009

Reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan, and Rochester, N.Y. -- A bomber 
slipped into a U.S. base in eastern Afghanistan on Wednesday and 
detonated a suicide vest, killing eight CIA officers in one of the 
deadliest days in the agency's history, current and former U.S. 
officials said.

The attack took place at Forward Operating Base Chapman in Khowst 
province, an area near the border with Pakistan that is a hotbed of 
insurgent activity. An undisclosed number of civilians were wounded, the 
officials said. No military personnel with the U.S. or North Atlantic 
Treaty Organization forces were killed or injured, they said.

A U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity said the CIA had a 
major presence at the base, in part because of its strategic location.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack in a message posted 
early today on its Pashto-language website. The statement, attributed to 
spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid, said the attacker was a member of the 
Afghan army who entered the base clad in his military uniform. It 
identified him only as Samiullah.

The casualties highlight the CIA's increasingly important role in 
Afghanistan, and come as the United States is embarking on a major 
buildup of its civilian workforce that parallels an increase in troop 
strength.

President Obama announced early this month that he planned to send 
30,000 more troops in an effort to break the momentum Taliban fighters 
have gained in many parts of the country. The deployment will bring the 
total U.S. military force there to nearly 100,000.

A former U.S. intelligence official knowledgeable about the bombing said 
it killed more CIA personnel than any attack since the bombing of the 
U.S. Embassy in Beirut in 1983. Before Wednesday's attack, four CIA 
operatives had been killed in Afghanistan, the former official said.

The eight dead were CIA officers, the former official said. "They were 
all career CIA officials."

The U.S. official said the bomber detonated his explosives vest in an 
area that was used as a fitness center.

CIA veterans were stunned by the news and at a loss to explain how a 
bomber was able to penetrate the security.

"It's a forward operating base in a dicey area, but to get a suicide 
bomber inside the wires -- it's hard to understand how that could 
happen," the former official said.

Officials said this fall that the agency was deploying spies, analysts 
and paramilitary operatives in a buildup that would make its station 
there among the largest in CIA history.

Though the CIA station is based at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, the bulk 
of its workforce is scattered among secret bases and military outposts 
dotting the country. Most CIA personnel in Afghanistan are involved in 
support functions such as providing security or managing computer 
systems, rather than in gathering and analyzing intelligence.

But some of the work civilians perform, particularly that involving law 
enforcement and intelligence gathering, is considered as dangerous as 
military duty. Three civilian Drug Enforcement Administration agents 
were killed in a helicopter crash in October in western Afghanistan. 
They were accompanying troops on a counternarcotics mission.

Khowst province has been a prime target of militants operating in 
eastern Afghanistan and just across the border in the tribal areas of 
Pakistan.

The Chapman base is part of NATO's Regional Command East, which is 
supervised by the U.S. military. It also houses Western civilians 
working on reconstruction projects.

The main U.S. base in the province, known as Camp Salerno, has been the 
target of numerous attacks. Bombers have blown themselves up just 
outside its gates while trying to penetrate the fortified installation. 
Afghan civilians usually bear the brunt of such attacks.

Last week, Taliban militants with rocket-propelled grenades and suicide 
vests entered a building near a police station in the nearby city of 
Gardez, setting off a battle with U.S. and Afghan security forces that 
lasted through the morning.

Meanwhile Wednesday, military officials said four Canadian soldiers and 
a Canadian journalist were killed in an explosion in Kandahar province 
in Afghanistan's south.

The Canadian Press quoted journalists in Afghanistan as saying the 
journalist was reporter Michelle Lang, 34, of the Calgary Herald.

The death toll among U.S. military forces this year has been the highest 
since the war in Afghanistan began in October 2001. This year, 311 
American troops have been killed, according to the independent website 
icasualties.org, bringing the death toll for U.S. forces during the war 
to 941.

A total of 138 Canadian troops have been killed, 32 of them this year, 
Canadian Press said.

greg.mil...@latimes.com

laura.k...@latimes.com


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