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Afghan Policeman Turns Gun On Colleagues, Killing 7

A day after a man dressed in an Afghan military uniform opened fire at service members from the NATO-led coalition, another insider attack is making news.

The AP reports:

"An Afghan policeman turned his gun on his colleagues at a police checkpoint in the country's south, killing seven policemen, a provincial official said Wednesday."In the Uruzgan attack, provincial spokesman Doost Mohammad Nayab, said the attacker opened fire and shot and killed seven of his colleagues at the checkpoint, then stole their weapons and fled in a police car."No one immediately claimed responsibility for the assault but Nayab says the shooter had Taliban connections and blamed the insurgents for the attack."

As we reported, the attacker in Tuesday's green-on-blue killed U.S. Maj. Gen. Harold Greene and he wounded more than a dozen, including a German brigadier general.

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Reporting from Kabul, NPR's Sean Carberry reports that NATO says everyone who survived the attacked is expected to make it.

Sean adds that the identity of the shooter has not been released. He reports that yesterday's shooting was only the second deadly green-on-blue attack this year. In 2012, for example, there were 40 insider attacks.

As for today's green-on-green attack, Sean says, this year, those kinds of attacks have been more common than green-on-blue attacks, but we tend not to hear about those.

We'll leave you with a roundup of headlines:

-- "Slain General in Afghanistan Was Quietly Effective Leader, Known for Technical Skill" (New York Times)

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-- Afghan attack: General Harold Greene was 'true hero' (BBC)

-- US general killed in Afghanistan: How big is threat of insider attacks? (Yahoo!)

-- Insider attacks: Why do some Afghan forces turn and kill allies? (CNN)

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