Stark
11-04-2009, 09:03 AM
The Taliban have said they carried out the fatal shooting of five British soldiers in Afghanistan, Prime Minister Gordon Brown has told the Commons.
Mr Brown said the Taliban could have infiltrated the Afghan police to carry out the attack in Helmand province.
Earlier the UK military blamed the attack on a "rogue" Afghan policeman.
The soldiers, three from the Grenadier Guards and two from the Royal Military Police, had been mentoring and living with the Afghan police in a compound.
The officer opened fire, injuring eight others, before fleeing the compound.
Manhunt
The prime minister said evidence was being gathered and security would be stepped up after the shooting.
But he added that training of Afghan police remained an "essential element" of the strategy in Afghanistan and would not be stopped as it was "what the Taliban fears most".
A total of 92 UK servicemen have now been killed this year, the highest annual figure since the Falklands War in 1982.
Six British servicemen and two Afghan National Police officers were injured in the attack, in the Nad Ali district.
An investigation is under way and the soldiers' next of kin have been informed of the deaths.
A UK military spokesman said: "One individual Afghan National Policeman, possibly in conjunction with another, went rogue.
"His motives and whereabouts are unknown at this time. Every effort is now being put into hunting down those responsible for this attack."
BBC Kabul correspondent Ian Pannell said sources had indicated the attacker was a police officer called Gulbuddin who had fled the scene after the shooting.
It appears he could have been involved in a dispute with his commander, but tribal sources have pointed to a link with the Taliban, our correspondent said.
Lt Col Wakefield, spokesman for Task Force Helmand, said the men who were killed had been mentoring a number of Afghan police officers.
He said they had worked and lived in the compound at a national police checkpoint for the past two weeks.
The attack did not come as a result of any breakdown or fight between British and Afghan forces, he stressed.
Col Wakefield said: "It is with the deepest sadness I must inform you that five British soldiers were shot and killed yesterday in Nad Ali district.
"Five British soldiers, five of our own, shot down in the course of their duty. They will not be forgotten."
Prime Minister Gordon Brown said the latest deaths were a "terrible loss".
He said: "My thoughts, condolences and sympathies go to their families, loved ones and colleagues. I know that the whole country too will mourn their loss.
"It is my highest priority to ensure our heroic troops have the best possible support and equipment - and the right strategy, backed by our international partners, and by a new Afghan government ready to play its part in confronting the challenges Afghanistan faces.
"Our troops deserve nothing less. My commitment to them remains unshakeable."
Worst incident
Tory leader David Cameron said: "I pay tribute, as will the whole country, to their professionalism and their courage, and send my condolences to their families and their friends."
Gen Stanley McChrystal, commander of the International Security Assistance Force, said he had spoken to the Afghan Minister of Interior, Haneef Atmar, who shared his regret for the incident.
"He gave me his assurance that this incident will be fully and transparently investigated, he said.
"We will not let this event deter our resolve to build a partnership with the Afghan National Security Forces to provide for Afghanistan's future."
A former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, Colonel Richard Kemp, said the shootings were a very worrying development.
He said: "It will undermine trust, certainly in the short term, until we establish exactly what happened. And it wouldn't at all surprise me now if there aren't a lot of soldiers, British soldiers in Afghanistan, with their fingers very firmly on the trigger when they're around Afghan police and military."
The British Military Police have launched an investigation. The local chief of the Afghan National Police (ANP) and the Afghan national director of security have also begun investigating at the scene.
There was a similar incident involving the deaths of two US personnel in 2008.
The British casualties were evacuated to the field hospital at Camp Bastion in Helmand by medical emergency response teams using Chinook and a US Black Hawk helicopters.
The Grenadier Guards have been advising the ANP and the Afghan National Army in training, tactics and patrol methods.
The deaths take the number of UK troops killed in Afghanistan since 2001 to 229.
This is the worst single incident in Helmand since 10 July, when five soldiers from 2 Rifles were killed by bombs near the town of Sangin.
Mr Brown said the Taliban could have infiltrated the Afghan police to carry out the attack in Helmand province.
Earlier the UK military blamed the attack on a "rogue" Afghan policeman.
The soldiers, three from the Grenadier Guards and two from the Royal Military Police, had been mentoring and living with the Afghan police in a compound.
The officer opened fire, injuring eight others, before fleeing the compound.
Manhunt
The prime minister said evidence was being gathered and security would be stepped up after the shooting.
But he added that training of Afghan police remained an "essential element" of the strategy in Afghanistan and would not be stopped as it was "what the Taliban fears most".
A total of 92 UK servicemen have now been killed this year, the highest annual figure since the Falklands War in 1982.
Six British servicemen and two Afghan National Police officers were injured in the attack, in the Nad Ali district.
An investigation is under way and the soldiers' next of kin have been informed of the deaths.
A UK military spokesman said: "One individual Afghan National Policeman, possibly in conjunction with another, went rogue.
"His motives and whereabouts are unknown at this time. Every effort is now being put into hunting down those responsible for this attack."
BBC Kabul correspondent Ian Pannell said sources had indicated the attacker was a police officer called Gulbuddin who had fled the scene after the shooting.
It appears he could have been involved in a dispute with his commander, but tribal sources have pointed to a link with the Taliban, our correspondent said.
Lt Col Wakefield, spokesman for Task Force Helmand, said the men who were killed had been mentoring a number of Afghan police officers.
He said they had worked and lived in the compound at a national police checkpoint for the past two weeks.
The attack did not come as a result of any breakdown or fight between British and Afghan forces, he stressed.
Col Wakefield said: "It is with the deepest sadness I must inform you that five British soldiers were shot and killed yesterday in Nad Ali district.
"Five British soldiers, five of our own, shot down in the course of their duty. They will not be forgotten."
Prime Minister Gordon Brown said the latest deaths were a "terrible loss".
He said: "My thoughts, condolences and sympathies go to their families, loved ones and colleagues. I know that the whole country too will mourn their loss.
"It is my highest priority to ensure our heroic troops have the best possible support and equipment - and the right strategy, backed by our international partners, and by a new Afghan government ready to play its part in confronting the challenges Afghanistan faces.
"Our troops deserve nothing less. My commitment to them remains unshakeable."
Worst incident
Tory leader David Cameron said: "I pay tribute, as will the whole country, to their professionalism and their courage, and send my condolences to their families and their friends."
Gen Stanley McChrystal, commander of the International Security Assistance Force, said he had spoken to the Afghan Minister of Interior, Haneef Atmar, who shared his regret for the incident.
"He gave me his assurance that this incident will be fully and transparently investigated, he said.
"We will not let this event deter our resolve to build a partnership with the Afghan National Security Forces to provide for Afghanistan's future."
A former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, Colonel Richard Kemp, said the shootings were a very worrying development.
He said: "It will undermine trust, certainly in the short term, until we establish exactly what happened. And it wouldn't at all surprise me now if there aren't a lot of soldiers, British soldiers in Afghanistan, with their fingers very firmly on the trigger when they're around Afghan police and military."
The British Military Police have launched an investigation. The local chief of the Afghan National Police (ANP) and the Afghan national director of security have also begun investigating at the scene.
There was a similar incident involving the deaths of two US personnel in 2008.
The British casualties were evacuated to the field hospital at Camp Bastion in Helmand by medical emergency response teams using Chinook and a US Black Hawk helicopters.
The Grenadier Guards have been advising the ANP and the Afghan National Army in training, tactics and patrol methods.
The deaths take the number of UK troops killed in Afghanistan since 2001 to 229.
This is the worst single incident in Helmand since 10 July, when five soldiers from 2 Rifles were killed by bombs near the town of Sangin.