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Two National Guard members in critical condition after shooting near White House: 29 Year old Afghan national identified as suspect

BouncerGuy

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Two National Guard members are in critical condition after being shot in Washington DC, just a few blocks away from the White House, in what the city's mayor called a "targeted" attack.

In an update earlier, police said a lone suspect opened fire on the National Guard members about 14:15 local time (19:15 GMT), before being held on the ground by other National Guard troops nearby that had heard the gunfire.

Multiple law enforcement officers told the BBC's US partner, CBS News, that the suspect is 29-year-old Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal. Officials also told CBS that Lakanwal entered the US in 2021.

After being shot in the incident, the suspect is now in police custody receiving treatment in hospital, police officials said. His motive is unknown.

Kash Patel, the FBI's director, said the attack would be investigated at a federal level.

US President Donald Trump, who was in Florida at the time of the attack, said the attacker would "pay a very steep price".

 
DHS identifies National Guard shooting suspect as Rahmanullah Lakanwal

The Department of Homeland Security has identified the suspect involved in the shooting that left two National Guard members in critical condition as Rahmanullah Lakanwal.

CNN previously reported the suspect applied for asylum in 2024, and it was granted by the Trump administration in April 2025.

CNN
 
Senseless violence.

Was he targeting Trump?

Trump already survived two assassination attempts in the past.
 
US suspends immigration requests for Afghans after National Guard shooting

The US has suspended the processing of all immigration requests for Afghan nationals pending a review of "security and vetting protocols", the US Citizenship and Immigration Services announced.

In a post on X, the agency said: "The protection and safety of our homeland and of the American people remains our singular focus and mission."

The decision comes after two National Guard soldiers were critically injured in a shooting near the White House. The alleged gunman was an Afghan national who entered the US in September 2021.

US President Donald Trump said the attack was an "act of terror", adding that he would take steps to remove foreigners "from any country who does not belong here".

Tens of thousands of Afghans entered the US under special immigration protections following the chaotic US withdrawal from the country in 2021 under former President Joe Biden.

Multiple law enforcement sources earlier identified the alleged gunman to the BBC's US partner CBS as Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a 29-year-old Afghan national who entered the country under the programme called Operation Allies Welcome.

In a statement following the shooting, Trump said the US "must now reexamine every single alien who has entered our country from Afghanistan under Biden".

The latest order comes on top of a US travel ban imposed by Trump on nationals of Afghanistan - and 11 other countries - earlier this year.

Afghan nationals holding Special Immigration Visas, available to those who worked directly with the US military before the Taliban took back control of the country in 2021, were among a few exceptions to the sweeping bans.

Earlier this year, Trump also ended a programme that granted deportation protections for thousands of people from Afghanistan.

The temporary protected status programme allowed migrants to get work permits if the US government deemed it unsafe for them to return to their home countries due to war.

BBC
 
So now illegal Afghans will be deported from US aswell.

Lol send them to India
 
Radical Islam remains a problem for the free world. How many innocent non Muslims will continue to suffer from these violent animals who even after leaving their gutter level countries resort to same violent habits abroad in nations of superior cultural heritage.
 
@Devadwal be sensible here... all afghans are Terror???
So now illegal Afghans will be deported from US aswell.

Lol send them to India
So how this is related to India. You tagged me first and now deleting the Post.

You know that by being smarter than Dev you are getting yourself into trouble.

Btw terrorist are radical Islamist terrorist so. ........ Kya bolu ab main yar

:klopp :kp
 
So how this is related to India. You tagged me first and now deleting the Post.

You know that by being smarter than Dev you are getting yourself into trouble.

Btw terrorist are radical Islamist terrorist so. ........ Kya bolu ab main yar

:klopp :kp
Because india was crying when Pakistan deported afghans.. won't they cry this time if America takes similar steps?
 
Because india was crying when Pakistan deported afghans.. won't they cry this time if America takes similar steps?
You're deporting the innocent people's who have nothing to do with terrorism. Anyway Pakistan or any other nations can deport anyone who lives illegal. I don't have any problem but support them.
:kp
 
@BouncerGuy do you know that it was USA and Pakistan who created Chaos in Afghanistan by supporting the terrorists organisation. This is reason why they were/ are taking asylum.

:kp
 
Multiple law enforcement officers told the BBC's US partner, CBS News, that the suspect is 29-year-old Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal. Officials also told CBS that Lakanwal entered the US in 2021.
As expected.
 
Afghan man who killed two US National Guards near White House in Washington DC was part of a secretive unit of the CIA. CIA got him smooth US entry days before Taliban took control of Kabul. This show failure of American deep state.

Firstly they create them and then they are bitten by the them . Same For Pakistan.

:kp
 
Radical Islam remains a problem for the free world. How many innocent non Muslims will continue to suffer from these violent animals who even after leaving their gutter level countries resort to same violent habits abroad in nations of superior cultural heritage.
29 Year old Afghan national identified as suspect

The suspect is an Afghan. Remember you keep saying India and Afghanistan are brothers? :inti
 
Because india was crying when Pakistan deported afghans.. won't they cry this time if America takes similar steps?
the-office-ouch.gif
 
Cia is so weak that they let this man work with them without knowing his real intentions!!!

Something is fishy here
 
Interesting observation. Indian should be looking to take in all these Afghan refugees.
Afghan refugees are mainly good and decent people.

Some bad eggs give them a bad name. I have full sympathy for the decent people, in their home country they have the Taliban, and abroad their reputation is tarnished by evil people. They are caught between a rock and a hard place, mainly due to actions of superpowers like USA, UK, USSR ( RUSSIA), now Pakistan, China, regional powers like Iran and minor local ruffians like India and Tajikistan.

Who knows what they could have achieved if they were allowed to live in peace. Perhaps the more moderates would have slowly won over the tribals?

It is a sad situation for them.
 
From what I heard this guy was a collaberator who sided with the US against the Afghan resistance movement, and that is why he got his asylum approved. Maybe he felt let down with his lack of recognition in America and turned rogue.

There has also been many stories of Afghans who helped the allies against Afghans in Britain who feel that they put their families back home at risk for nothing. It seems to be a lingering gripe.
 
From what I heard this guy was a collaberator who sided with the US against the Afghan resistance movement, and that is why he got his asylum approved. Maybe he felt let down with his lack of recognition in America and turned rogue.

There has also been many stories of Afghans who helped the allies against Afghans in Britain who feel that they put their families back home at risk for nothing. It seems to be a lingering gripe.

Maybe he was used, mentally changed to attack as US is desperate for Bagram airbase.
 
US official says shooting suspect was vetted by intel agencies and “clean on all checks”

Rahmanullah Lakanwal began working with the CIA around 2011, a senior US official told CNN.

At the time, the CIA would have done its own vetting of him through a variety of databases, including the National Counterterrorism Center database, to see if he had any known ties to terrorist groups. The CIA did its own vetting before he started working with them and kept the identities of those they worked with secret, the official said.

NCTC would have vetted him again during Operation Allies Welcome in 2021 for any ties to terrorism before he was allowed into the US. He was clean then as well and did not show any ties to terror organizations, per the senior US official.

“In terms of vetting, nothing came up,” according to a senior US official. “He was clean on all checks.”

The official added that the US government had been doing continuous, annual vetting of individuals since the Afghans’ arrival in the US, especially in the wake of the failed terror plot disrupted before the election last year in Oklahoma which involved an Afghan evacuee.

The vetting of people overseas by US intelligence agencies is different than what domestic agencies are expected to do once individuals arrive and are seeking asylum, a second official noted.

CNN
 
US halts all asylum claim decisions in wake of National Guard shooting

The Trump administration is halting all asylum decisions in the wake of the shooting of two National Guard soldiers in Washington DC, US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) director Joseph Edlow has said.

On Friday, in a post on X, Edlow said the pause would be in place "until we can ensure that every alien is vetted and screened to the maximum degree possible".

The announcement comes hours after President Donald Trump pledged to "permanently pause migration" to the US from all "third world countries".

On Thursday, Trump announced that a US National Guard member had died from her injuries after Wednesday's shooting, for which an Afghan national has been blamed.

Officers at the USCIS, a branch of the Department of Homeland Security, were instructed to refrain from approving, denying or closing asylum applications received by the agency for all nationalities, according to reporting by CBS News, the BBC's US partner.

According to guidance seen by CBS, officers could continue to work asylum application and review cases up to the point of making a decision.

"Once you've reached decision entry, stop and hold," the directive said.

There are still few details available about both Friday's directive and Trump's earlier remarks.

Trump did not name which countries might be affected by his plan. Such a move could face legal challenges and has already prompted pushback from UN agencies.

Both announcements followed Wednesday's fatal attack, and represent a further toughening of the Trump administration's stance towards migrants during his second presidency.

Among other moves, Trump has sought to enact mass deportations of migrants who entered the US illegally, to drastically cut the annual number of refugee admissions, and to end automatic citizenship rights that currently apply to nearly anyone born on US territory.

In the wake of Wednesday's shooting, Trump promised to remove from the US any foreigner "from any country who does not belong here". The same day, the US suspended processing all immigration requests from Afghans, saying the decision was made pending a review of "security and vetting protocols".

Then on Thursday, the USCIS said it would re-examine green cards issued to individuals who had migrated to the US from 19 countries. The agency did not explicitly mention Wednesday's attack.

When asked by the BBC which countries were on the list, the USCIS pointed to a June proclamation by the White House that included Afghanistan, Cuba, Haiti, Iran, Somalia and Venezuela. There were no further details about what the re-examination would look like.

Trump's strongly worded two-part post on Thursday night went further still, pledging to "end all federal benefits and subsidies to noncitizens".

The US president wrote on Truth Social that this would "allow the US system to fully recover" from policies that had eroded the "gains and living conditions" of many Americans.

'Third-world countries'

In the post, the president also blamed refugees for causing the "social dysfunction in America" and vowed to remove "anyone who is not a net asset" to the US.

He said that "hundreds of thousands of refugees from Somalia were completely taking over the once great State of Minnesota" and took particular aim at the state's Democratic lawmakers.

"I will permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries to allow the U.S. system to fully recover," the president wrote.

The phrase "third world" is a term that was used in the past to describe poorer, developing nations.

The president had already imposed a travel ban on nationals of Afghanistan - and 11 other countries, primarily in Africa and Asia - earlier this year. Another travel ban targeting a number of majority-Muslim countries was enacted during his first term.

The UN responded to Trump's words by urging his administration to observe international agreements regarding asylum seekers.

"We expect all countries, including the United States, to honour their commitments under the 1953 Refugee Convention," the deputy spokesperson for the UN secretary general told Reuters.

The Trump response amounted to a "scapegoating" of migrants in the US, argued Jeremy McKinney, president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

Speaking to the BBC World Service's Newsday programme before Trump's latest comments, Mr McKinney highlighted that the attacker's motive was not known.

"These types of issues - they don't know skin colour, they don't know nationality," he said. "When a person becomes radicalised or is suffering some type of mental illness, that person can come from any background."

Suspect in DC shooting is Afghan

The flurry of announcements come after officials said that the suspect in the Washington DC shooting, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, had come to the US in 2021.

He travelled under a programme that offered special immigration protections to Afghans who had worked with US forces in the wake of the American withdrawal from Afghanistan.

Mr Lakanwal previously worked alongside the CIA, the agency's current director has said.

Mr Lakanwal would have been vetted by the US both at the time the he started his work alongside the CIA, and when he ultimately travelled to the US, according to a senior US official who spoke to CNN.

A childhood friend told the New York Times that Mr Lakanwal had experienced mental health issues after his work with his unit.

Mr Lakanwal later applied for asylum in 2024. His application was reportedly granted earlier this year, after Trump returned to power.

But his request for a green card, which is tied to the asylum grant, is pending, a Homeland Security official told CBS.

The suspect was arrested after the attack and was said to be not co-operating with authorities. Trump described the incident as an "act of terror".

He said the following day that one of the two members of the National Guard who were shot had died.

Sarah Beckstrom, a 20-year-old from West Virginia, was working in the city as part of Trump's deployment of National Guard members to crack down on crime.

She had volunteered to work in DC over the US Thanksgiving holiday, Attorney General Pam Bondi said.

The second National Guard member, 24-year-old Andrew Wolfe, was said by Trump to be "fighting for his life".

BBC
 
National Guard shooting suspect spent weeks isolated in bedroom, case worker's email said

The man accused of shooting two National Guard members in Washington DC last week spent weeks at a time alone in a dark room and suffered "manic episodes" - according to comments written in 2024 by a case worker who helped the suspect's family with their relocation after they fled Afghanistan.

Rahmanullah Lakanwal is accused of carrying out an "ambush" that killed Sarah Beckstrom, 20, and seriously injured Andrew Wolfe, 24.

Officials said the 29-year-old entered the US in 2021 as part of a programme for Afghans who had worked with American troops in Afghanistan.

According to the emails from last year that were obtained by BBC's US partner, CBS News, Mr Lakanwal struggled with his mental health.


 
Afghan Taliban minister says US shooting has nothing to do with his people or govt

The shooting of National Guard members in Washington, DC, over which an Afghan immigrant has been charged, has nothing to do with Afghanistan’s people or its government, Afghan Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi said on Wednesday.

Muttaqi’s comments are the first on the incident by the Afghan Taliban government, and come a week after events in Washington when suspect Rahmanullah Lakanwal is accused of opening fire on guard members, killing one and critically wounding another.

On Tuesday, Lakanwal was charged with murder and other offences as he made his first court appearance, appearing remotely from a hospital bed.

“This incident has nothing to do with the honourable people of Afghanistan or with the Afghan government,” Muttaqi said.

“This is an individual criminal act, and the person who committed it was trained by the Americans themselves.”

US officials have said Lakanwal was part of a CIA-backed unit in Afghanistan. He entered the US in 2021 through then-president Joe Biden’s Operation Allies Welcome scheme for those fearing reprisal by the Taliban forces, who seized control of Afghanistan after the US military’s withdrawal.

“They (the Americans) trained him, they assigned him, and through an illegal process, contrary to any international standard, they brought him from Afghanistan to the United States,” Muttaqi said.

Lakanwal’s status as an Afghan immigrant quickly became a flashpoint in Trump’s immigration crackdown. He was granted asylum under Trump.


 
If anything he is probably anti-Taliban.. crazy Afghans on both sides are extremists
 
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