After
attacking the base where Prince Harry was stationed in Afghanistan last week,
the Taliban announced that he is still in danger. This time from fellow UK citizens
trained as turncoat fanatics ready to kill him
Taliban
Spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi told The Daily Star in an interview “We have
thousands of attackers ready to give up their lives for the Prophet Mohammed
and kill the prince. That is our intention. They come from all over the world –
from England, Pakistan.”
“They
will lay down their lives so that the world will know our anger. The British
and American invaders are not welcome in this land and must leave,” he said.
That the
Taliban has been luring foreign nationals to train with them in Afghanistan is
no secret; several Taliban combatants have been captured of European, British,
and American origin.
This is,
however, the first direct insinuation that homegrown UK citizens could be used
in a turn-around suicide mission against the prince.
Prince
Harry survived a Taliban attack on Camp Bastion on September 14, where he is
currently serving a four-month tour of duty. Although failing to kill the
prince, the Taliban claimed a moral victory, killing two marines and destroying
or damaging eight US fighter jets. The attack cost the base a stunning US$200
million in damage. It was also the start of a new Taliban campaign called
“Harry Operations” that would specifically target the prince.
“We
attacked that base because Prince Harry was also on it, and so they can know
our anger,” Ahmadi told the Associated Press after the attack.
“Thousands
more suicide attackers are ready to give up their lives for the sake of the
prophet.”
Insurgents
with Premier League football tattoos have already been found by British
soldiers, and British surveillance has already picked up Yorkshire and Midland
accents on Taliban radio frequencies, The Daily Star reported.
However,
after the September 14 attack, NATO and the British Defense Ministry were quick
to dispel any notion that the prince could actually have been killed.
"Prince
Harry was never in any danger,” said NATO spokesman Martyn Crighton following
the attack. Camp Bastion is one of the most heavily fortified bases in the
world, and the prince was 2 kilometers from the attack site.
Prince
Harry flies an Apache helicopter, working on support missions. Britain has not
lost any of its 67 Apaches in Afghanistan, and the Defense Ministry has claimed
that the risk to the prince is “low.”
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