|
Taliban,
al Qaeda fugitives thought to
be responsible for shooting of soldier
By Christopher Torchia
Associated Press
KANDAHAR,
Afghanistan A U.S. Special Forces soldier was shot in the
face Wednesday when a gunman fired at a group of Americans in an
apparent drive-by shooting on a crowded shopping street, the U.S.
military said.
Afghan
officials said they believed Taliban or al Qaeda fugitives were
responsible and said they feared there may be more such attacks
on U.S. troops and their Afghan allies.
The
soldier, who was not identified by name, was taken to the hospital
at the U.S. base outside the city and was reported in stable condition,
said Marine Corps Maj. Ralph Mills, a spokesman for U.S. Central
Command in Tampa, Fla. He will be flown to another facility, Mills
said without specifying where.
One
Afghan was also slightly wounded in the shooting early in the afternoon
near the Kandahar governors mansion, where some U.S. troops
are garrisoned, witnesses said.
Afghan
troops said they rounded up 15 to 20 people for questioning and
summoned shopkeepers in the area of the shooting to the governors
office, where officials told them to be vigilant.
There
are still individual Taliban or al Qaeda members in the city,
said Abdul
Bari, a local commander. They were probably responsible for
this.
We
may see more such incidents in the future.
The
shooting occurred five days after an unknown assailant fired a rocket
at the Kandahar governors mansion. The rocket missed the building
and exploded, causing no casualties.
The
Americans, who witnesses said were wearing civilian clothes, initially
thought a firecracker had been thrown from a vehicle until they
saw one man was bleeding, Mills said.
Afghan
police cordoned off the area and searched for the assailant. Mills
said the U.S. command believed the incident was a drive-by
shooting.
An
Afghan gun dealer named Daood said four American soldiers were buying
magazine belts at his shop when he heard a gunshot outside. It appeared
a bullet from a pistol had grazed the face of one American in the
street, he said. Daood said an Afghan standing nearby was also grazed.
Around
the time of the shooting, the Americans were taking photographs
with the many children who had surrounded them, Daood said.
The
gunman fled and the wounded American walked to his vehicle unaided
even though he was bleeding, Daood said. One Afghan soldier said
the American had been shot through the cheek, but was seen smiling
and talking.
Another
gunsmith, who gave his name only as Mohammed, said the Americans
were accompanied by an Afghan translator.
Mohammed
Saleem, also a gunsmith, said the Americans quickly left the scene
after the shooting and he praised them for not opening fire on a
street filled with children who had just left school for the day.
If
they had been Russians, maybe they would have started shooting,
Saleem said. We were surprised that the Americans were armed
but didnt shoot.
He
and other shopkeepers were collecting money to buy a lunch for poor
people on Thursday to express their thanks that the incident was
not more serious.
U.S.
Special Forces members often drive in downtown Kandahar, stopping
to shop in local stores.
The
street where the shooting took place is filled with gun shops. Saleem
said American troops in civilian clothing stop an average of two
times a week to buy gun equipment, including shotgun shells.
The
area is a maze of winding, dirt alleyways, kiosks and shacks with
many places to hide. Hours after the shooting, U.S. special forces
members who stay at the governors office appeared to be more
vigilant than usual; three soldiers with binoculars surveyed the
busy, cluttered streets from the roof of the compound.
Kandahar
is relatively quiet, but the rocket firing near the governors
office and the shooting of the American soldier were reminders of
how violence can easily erupt in the war-weary nation.
Four
U.S. soldiers were also killed in the area Monday, in an accidental
explosion while trying to destroyed captured ordnance.
|