An Afghan policeman stands next to Taverna, a Lebanese restaurant, that  was attacked in Kabul, on Jan. 18, 2014. (Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty  Images)
Friday nights are usually pretty busy at the Taverna du Liban,  Kabul’s first and still most popular Lebanese restaurant. Other eateries  featuring hummus and baba ganoush can be found, of course, but the  foreigners who flock to the Taverna are interested in more than the  excellent kebab.
They come for the décor, heavy on dark, carved wood and colorful  ceramics; they stay for the complimentary chocolate cake that arrives  without fail at the end of every meal.
Most of all, they appreciate the relaxed, friendly atmosphere, where  wine is served in teapots, and the silver-haired owner drifts among the  guests, bringing them new dishes to try, frequently accompanied by his  enormous and bad-tempered cat, an Afghan stray that he adopted and loved  unreservedly until it died a few years ago.
That is the way it used to be, in the old days — until yesterday, in fact — before the Taliban stormed the beloved Taverna,  killing at least 21 people, 13 of them foreigners. The victims included  owner Kamal Hamade, who, according to news reports, had grabbed a gun  and gone to battle the attackers. They shot him dead. 
The restaurant, located in the heart of Wazir Akbar Khan, the tony  diplomatic district that is home to many embassies and dozens of top  officials, had been a fixture in Kabul since about 2006.
It had gone through more than a few security scares during that time,  and had acquired a wall around it, a locking gate, and armed guards to  make the patrons feel safe. It was on the “approved” list even for the  notoriously finicky US Embassy, whose staff are largely restricted to  their fortress-like compound.
No US diplomats were on hand Friday, however, according to one embassy source.
This is among the worst incidents of violence directed at foreigners  since the start of the war in 2001. Other notable episodes, such as the attack on UN guest house in Kabul in 2009, or the 2008 storming of the luxury Serena Hotel, may have been more spectacularly headline-grabbing, but resulted in fewer casualties.
This was more than a random attack on a popular watering hole. The  Taliban claimed responsibility, saying that it was payback for a  coalition airstrike in a province just north of Kabul.
As the Taliban put it: 
“The attack was in retaliation to the massacre carried out by foreign invaders two days earlier in Parwan province's Siyah Gerd district where the enemy airstrikes destroyed up to 10 homes, razed several orchards as well as killing and wounding up to 30 innocent civilians mostly defenseless women and children.”
The insurgents had targeted the Taverna since it was “a restaurant frequented by high ranking foreigners …  where the invaders used to dine with booze and liquor in the plenty.”
Among the dead were the representative of the International Monetary  Fund in Afghanistan, a top UN official and two teachers from the  American University in Afghanistan.
The international community wasquick to condemn the attacks; UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon called it a “horrific  attack,” and IMF head Christine Lagarde said that “we at the fund are  all devastated.”
The UK’s Labour leader, Ed Miliband, also weighed in. "People  everywhere will be appalled and shocked by this barbarous act of terror  deliberately targeting members of the international community living and  working in Kabul in the service of the Afghan people,” he said in a statement.
The White House also reacted strongly, while plugging its own programs in Afghanistan.
“There is no possible justification for this attack, which has killed  innocent civilians, including Americans, working every day to help the  Afghan people achieve a better future with higher education and economic  assistance,” the White House press office said Saturday.
The only one who seemed reluctant to comment was Afghanistan’s president, Hamid Karzai.
It was almost 24 hours after the attack before the Office of the President issued a statement, rather grudging and ungracious in its message:
"If NATO forces and in the lead the United States of America want to  cooperate and be united with Afghan people, they must target terrorism,"  he said. The Afghan president further criticized his supposed ally,  saying that America was conducting a "policy which has caused many  sacrifices in Afghanistan and was not successful in the past decade."
Karzai had earlier condemned the airstrikes in Parwan Province which, he said, had killed eight civilians.
“How many more innocent Afghans have to die so it gets the attention of US officials?” said his spokesman, Aimal Faizi.
Relations have been quite strained between Karzai and Washington lately, and this reaction is unlikely to help.
The Americans have been trying to get the Afghan president to sign a  Bilateral Security Agreement that would regulate the status of US forces  in Afghanistan following the withdrawal of combat troops by the end of  2014.
Now all eyes, and hopes, will be pinned on the Afghan presidential  elections, scheduled for April, which Washington hopes will usher in a  more cooperative administration.
The Taverna will be sorely missed, and Kamal Hamade will be sincerely  mourned. Also on the list of reasons to grieve will be the loss of a  sense of immunity, a feeling that the war is far away.
What ordinary Afghans have known for more than a decade is now being  brought home to the thousands of foreign personnel in Kabul and  elsewhere in the country: no one can feel safe in Afghanistan these  days. 
Journalist Jean MacKenzie worked as a reporter in Afghanistan from October 2004 to December 2011.
Source: globalpost
Source: globalpost






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