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Kabul (AFP) April 30, 2011 A gunman who opened fire at an air force training centre in Kabul, leaving eight US troops and an American contractor dead, appeared to be acting alone, NATO said Saturday. The Afghan ex-pilot involved was shot during the incident on Wednesday and found dead at a different location in the building, after the worst attack of its kind in almost a decade of war. It was not known what triggered the shoot-out. The Pentagon has said the dead were mostly senior US Air Force officers, including four Air Force majors and a lieutenant colonel. "At this point in the investigation, it appears that the gunman was acting alone. Beyond that, no Taliban connection with the gunman has been discovered," said a NATO release. "However, the investigation is still ongoing, and we have not conclusively ruled out that possibility," it said. The US air trainers' deaths raise fresh questions over the massive NATO-led effort to expand and train Afghanistan's military and police so they can take control of security when foreign combat operations end in 2014. It was clear how eight armed officers came to die in the incident. "Preliminary findings of this investigation indicate that the NATO trainers who were killed were armed with weapons and ammunition," said the statement. Taliban militants have tried to infiltrate the ranks of the Afghan army and police to carry out attacks against international forces from within, a matter of huge concern for both Afghanistan and its NATO-led military backers. There have been incidents where Afghan army or police recruits have opened fire on NATO troops and caused casualties. However the Air Force attacker's motives are not yet known, nor was it clear who killed him. "Initial ballistics analysis and post-event imagery indicate that the alleged gunman, who appeared to be acting alone, was severely wounded prior to departing the room where the initial attack took place," NATO said. The initial findings show that the the gunman "appeared to be carrying two weapons. The gunman was later found dead at a different location within the building," it added. The attacker was a 45-year-old former pilot who had been working as an air force administrator, Colonel Mohammed Bahadur Raeeskhail, the Afghan air force's media relations chief said earlier. An Afghan official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the gunman was from a well-respected Kabul family and that the shooting was the result of a disagreement, not terrorism. The Taliban claimed responsibility in a text message to AFP, but are known routinely to exaggerate their claims. There are around 130,000 international troops serving in Afghanistan, the bulk of them from the United States, although Afghan forces are in control of security in Kabul.
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