Afghan authorities arrested more than a dozen Afghan soldiers in Kabul on Tuesday after the discovery of around 11 suicide vests and a potential mass suicide attack on the Afghan Defense Ministry, said the BBC, citing intelligence officials.
The number of soldiers arrested vary, but the BBC reported 18 and Al Jazeera said 16, while The New York Times simply said "more than a dozen" had been arrested.
The planned suicide attacks would have caused "significant loss of life," revealed the BBC, and some of those arrested were Afghan National Army soldiers.
The Afghan Defense Ministry, in the meantime, has denied the reports, calling them "rumors." Dawlat Wazeri, the ministry's spokesman, told the BBC the ministry was working on finding the men who spread those rumors to the media.
More on GlobalPost: General John Allen says he is investigating command structure in Afghanistan
According to CBS News, the vests were found in three rooms surrounding the parking lot at the ministry. Though the investigation is still underway, it was noted that 11 buses were scheduled to leave the parking lot with Afghan army personnel. Investigators were working on a theory which involved a bomber getting on each of the buses and staging a highly damaging simultaneous attack.
The attack, if carried out, would also have been highly embarrassing for the Afghan government, due to its proximity to the presidential palace. Al Jazeera reported that the ministry was under lockdown, as it was considered "one of the most secure, heavily guarded buildings in the Afghan capital."
More on GlobalPost: Poll: 69% of Americans want US out of Afghanistan
Shukria Barakzai, the former Afghan chairwoman on the defense committee, told Al Jazeera that such plots and attacks were "evidence of high level infiltration" by the Taliban. She said, "It must be people who have links inside of the government, inside the presidential palace, inside the ministry of defense and other ministries…"
The vests were discovered on the same day that three NATO coalition members were killed in two separate attacks, two of them by an assailant in an Afghan army uniform.
More on GlobalPost: The Argentine economy's fuzzy math problem
We want to hear your feedback so we can keep improving our website, theworld.org. Please fill out this quick survey and let us know your thoughts (your answers will be anonymous). Thanks for your time!