Saturday, September 10, 2016

Embassies Attacked

From the US State Department's Website:
"Significant Attacks Against US Diplomatic Facilities and Personnel"

THIS DOCUMENT, COMPILED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE, BUREAU OF DIPLOMATIC SECURITY,  CATALOGS SIGNIFICANT ATTACKS AGAINST U.S. DIPLOMATIC FACILITIES AND PERSONNEL ABROAD FROM 1998-2012.


JANUARY 1 TO DECEMBER 31 – IRAQ:  Unknown individuals targeted the U.S. Consulate in Kirkuk with indirect-fire attacks on 41 separate occasions; additional indirect-fire attacks were launched against other U.S. interests in Iraq.
*FEBRUARY 2, 2012 – BAMAKO, MALI:  Demonstrators attacked a U.S. Embassy vehicle with stones while the vehicle was en route to evacuate Mission dependents from a local school. A second Embassy vehicle also was attacked in a different location. There were no injuries in either incident.
FEBRUARY 20, 2012 – KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN: Unknown individuals attacked a U.S. Army convoy carrying one Embassy employee, killing one U.S. soldier and wounding two others.
MARCH 2, 2012 – ADEN, YEMEN:  A gunman fired three rounds into the side window of a U.S. Embassy vehicle.  No one was hurt in the attack.  
MARCH 17, 2012 – FARYAB PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN:  Insurgents fired two rockets at the U.S. provincial reconstruction team compound. No injuries or damage were reported. 
MARCH 24, 2012 – URUZGAN PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN:  An explosive device detonated against a vehicle outside an entry control point of the U.S. provincial reconstruction team compound, killing four Afghan National Police officers and one local national.
MARCH 26, 2012 – LASHKAR GAH, AFGHANISTAN:  An individual dressed in an Afghan National Army uniform killed two International Security Assistance Force soldiers and wounded another at the main entry control point of the U.S. provincial reconstruction team compound. 
APRIL 12, 2012 – VALLEY OF THE APURIMAC, ENE, AND MANTARO RIVERS, PERU:  Presumed members of Sendero Luminoso terrorist group fired on a U.S. government-owned helicopter, killing one Peruvian police officer and wounding the Peruvian crew chief. 
APRIL 15 TO 16, 2012 – KABUL, AFGHANISTAN:  The U.S. Embassy compound sustained minor damage after heavily armed gunmen attacked several diplomatic missions and Afghan government buildings throughout the city.
APRIL 16, 2012 – GHOR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN:  Unknown individuals attacked a U.S. provincial reconstruction team compound with small-arms fire but caused no injuries.
APRIL 16, 2012 – MANILA, PHILIPPINES:  Protesters stole several letters from the sign at the Embassy front gate and threw paint onto the building.
JUNE 6, 2012 – BENGHAZI, LIBYA:  An explosive device detonated outside the U.S. Special Mission, leaving a large hole in the perimeter wall but causing no injuries.
JUNE 16, 2012 – PAKTIKA PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN:  Unknown gunmen opened fire on a U.S. Embassy helicopter, striking the aircraft and rupturing its fuel tank, but causing no injuries.
AUGUST 8, 2012 – ASADABAD CITY, AFGHANISTAN:  Two suicide bombers detonated their explosives near U.S. provincial reconstruction team members walking near Forward Operating Base Fiaz, killing three U.S. service members and one USAID employee, and wounding nine U.S. soldiers, one U.S. diplomat, four local employees, and one Afghan National Army member.
SEPTEMBER 3, 2012 – PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN:  A suicide bomber in an explosives-laden vehicle attacked a  U.S. Consulate General motorcade near the U.S. Consulate General’s housing complex, injuring two U.S. officials, two locally employed staff drivers, a local police bodyguard, and several other policemen providing security for the motorcade. 
SEPTEMBER 8, 2012 – ZABUL PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN:  The U.S. provincial reconstruction team was targeted with two improvised explosive devices, but suffered no injuries.
SEPTEMBER 10, 2012 – BAGHDAD, IRAQ:  Unknown individuals on the ground fired at a U.S. Embassy aircraft, but caused no damage to the aircraft and no injuries to those on board.
SEPTEMBER 11, 2012 – JERUSALEM:  A “flash-bang” device was thrown at the front door of an official U.S. Consulate General residence, damaging an exterior door and hallway, but causing no injuries.
SEPTEMBER 11 TO 15, 2012 - CAIRO, EGYPT:  Protesters overran U.S. Embassy perimeter defenses and entered the Embassy compound.   No Americans were injured in the violent demonstrations that continued for four days.
SEPTEMBER 11 TO 12, 2012 – BENGHAZI, LIBYA:  Attackers used arson, small arms, machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades, and mortars against the U.S. Special Mission, a Mission annex, and U.S. personnel en route between both facilities, killing the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other U.S. government personnel, wounding two U.S. personnel and three Libyan contract guards, and destroying both facilities.
SEPTEMBER 12, 2012 – TUNIS, TUNISIA:  Demonstrators, at the U.S. Embassy to protest inflammatory material posted on the Internet, threw stones at the compound’s fence and tried to get to the Embassy perimeter wall, before police secured the area. 
SEPTEMBER 13, 2012 – SANA’A, YEMEN:  Protesters stormed the Embassy compound, looting property and setting several fires. No U.S. citizens were injured in the attack. Throughout the day, groups of protesters harassed the U.S. Embassy and a hotel where Embassy personnel were residing.  
SEPTEMBER 14, 2012 – CHENNAI, INDIA:  Protesters outside the U.S. Consulate General threw a Molotov cocktail, causing some damage but no injuries. 
Demonstrators
SEPTEMBER 14, 2012 – KHARTOUM, SUDAN:  An angry mob threw rocks at the U.S. Embassy, cut the Mission’s local power supply, and used seized police equipment to battle the Embassy’s defenders, damaging more than 20 windows and destroying several security cameras.
SEPTEMBER 14, 2012 – TUNIS, TUNISIA:  Protesters breached the U.S. Embassy wall and caused significant damage to the motor pool, outlying buildings, and the chancery.  Separately, unknown assailants destroyed the interior of the American Cooperative School.  No U.S. citizens were injured in either attack.
SEPTEMBER 16, 2012 – KARACHI, PAKISTAN:  Protesters broke through police lines and threw rocks into the U.S. Consulate General perimeter, damaging some windows but causing no injuries.   
SEPTEMBER 17, 2012 – JAKARTA, INDONESIA:  Demonstrators threw Molotov cocktails and other material at the U.S. Embassy to protest inflammatory material posted on the Internet, injuring 11 police officers and causing minor damage to the Embassy.
SEPTEMBER 18, 2012 – BEIJING, CHINA:  Protesters surrounded the U.S. ambassador’s vehicle and caused minor damage to the vehicle, but no injuries were reported.
SEPTEMBER 18, 2012 – PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN:  Demonstrators outside the U.S. Consulate threw rocks and Molotov cocktails, and pulled down a billboard showing a U.S. flag.
SEPTEMBER 23, 2012 – LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM:  During a demonstration by thousands of protesters outside the U.S. Embassy, an unknown individual threw a rock at the building, damaging a ballisticresistant window.
SEPTEMBER 27, 2012 – KOLKATA, INDIA:  Protesters marched toward the American Center, rushed the gates, and threw sticks and stones at the facility, causing minor damage to a window.
OCTOBER 1, 2012 – KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN:  Unknown individuals opened fire on the U.S. provincial reconstruction team facility with small-arms fire, but caused no injuries. 
OCTOBER 4, 2012 – KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN:  Unknown individuals targeted the U.S. provincial reconstruction team with small-arms fire, but caused no injuries.
OCTOBER 11, 2012 – SANA’A, YEMEN:  The U.S. Embassy’s senior foreign service national investigator was shot and killed in his vehicle by gunmen on a motorcycle.  The terrorist group Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula claimed responsibility for the attack.
OCTOBER 13, 2012 – KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN:  A suicide bomber detonated a suicide vest as a delegation of U.S. and Afghan officials arrived for a meeting, killing two U.S. citizens and five Afghan officials.
OCTOBER 29, 2012 – TUNIS, TUNISIA:  Two men in a car harassed and threw a can at a U.S. military officer assigned to the Embassy who was driving a vehicle with diplomatic license plates. The officer was not injured in the incident.
NOVEMBER 4, 2012 – FARAH, AFGHANISTAN:  An unknown individual attacked the U.S. provincial reconstruction team facility with a grenade but caused no injuries.
NOVEMBER 18, 2012 – PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN:  Two mortar rounds exploded near U.S. Consulate General housing, injuring one local guard and damaging the consul general’s residence with shrapnel.
NOVEMBER 21, 2012 – JAKARTA, INDONESIA:  Demonstrators, protesting inflammatory material posted on the Internet, threw objects at the U.S. Embassy.
NOVEMBER 23, 2012 – MEDAN, INDONESIA:  Demonstrators at the American Presence Post damaged a vehicle gate in an attempt to gain access to the ground floor of the building. 
NOVEMBER 23, 2012 – PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN:  A round of indirect fire landed near a U.S. Consulate General residence but did not detonate and caused no injuries or damage. 
DECEMBER 4, 2012 – DHAKA, BANGLADESH:  Demonstrators surrounded a U.S. Embassy vehicle on the road, attempted to set it afire, and threw rocks and bricks at it, shattering several windows and injuring the driver.
DECEMBER 22, 2012 – TUNIS, TUNISIA:  Protesters forced their way into the Ministry of Justice to confront a visiting delegation of U.S. government investigators.  No one was hurt in the encounter, but photos of the U.S. investigators inside the Ministry of Justice were later posted on social media and other Internet sites.


^ This is a report from the US State Department and covers attacks on US embassies, consulates and staff from 2012 to 1998. I only included the attacks for 1 year (2012) because the report is 56 pages. I wanted to include this because on Facebook and other social media sites people tend to re-post anything and everything they see without checking whether it is factual or not. There's an "Occupy Democrat" meme going around that "shows" embassy attacks under Bush (W) and most of it isn't factual - - I double-checked with this report. I don't really care what people post (from either the ultra Liberal or the ultra Conservative side as long as what they say/post is factual. I just don't like to see regular people blindly re-post and believe things simply because someone else put them on the news, on the Internet, in a book, etc. People with basic common sense and thought-structure should take a few minutes to check the source and see if it is correct or not before they join the bandwagon. If they don't then they are simply lemmings. I have to admit I sometimes repost or say things that I later find out not to be completely correct and then I go back and delete it or revise it. I know the majority of people don't. Once it's out there it's out there - good or bad, truth or not. With that said I think the US Government (the White House, the Department of Defense and the Department of State, among others.) needs to do a lot more to protect US embassies, consulates and staff overseas. It doesn't matter who is President or if you are a Democrat or Republican the fact is that these kinds of attacks have gotten worse over the decades and more needs to be to prevent them. ^


http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/211361.pdf

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.