U.S. soldiers kill six Afghan police in shared mistake
A statement said that the police, thinking the Americans were Taliban fighters, fired first.
KABUL, Afghanistan - U.S. Special Forces killed six Afghan police and wounded 13 yesterday in a case of mistaken identity by both sides after the police fired on the Americans during an operation against an insurgent commander.
A U.S. military statement said police fired on the American forces after the troops battled and killed an armed militant in the city of Qalat, capital of the southern province of Zabul. The Americans returned fire on the police but only later learned their identities. An Afghan civilian was also killed in the exchange.
"Coalition forces deeply regret the incident of mistaken fire," said Col. Jerry O'Hara, a U.S. military spokesman. "Initial reports indicate this was a tragic case of mistaken identity on both parts."
Gulab Shah Alikhail, the province's deputy governor, said U.S. Special Forces carried out an operation in a village near a police checkpoint on the outskirts of Qalat. The police, thinking it was a Taliban attack, opened fire, he said. Then a helicopter fired on the security post and destroyed it, he said.
The attack collapsed the police station roof and damaged a nearby home, said Gilani Khan, the deputy provincial police chief.
"Unfortunately, the Special Forces didn't inform the police that they were going to the village," Alikhail said.
U.S. officials quietly admit that they are hesitant to share detailed plans of raids against extremist commanders for fear that government officials connected to the Taliban could tip off the extremists.
The United States said the target of yesterday's raid was an extremist commander "known to coordinate attacks against coalition forces along Highway One," Afghanistan's main highway. The statement did not say whether that commander was killed.
Friendly fire between U.S. or NATO forces and Afghan troops or police happens in Afghanistan several times a year. President Hamid Karzai has deplored the deaths of Afghan civilians during U.S. or NATO operations but has said that some friendly-fire deaths were inevitable during war.