Soldier in suicide bomber costume prompts alert at US base

FILE - This file image taken from a militant website associated with Islamic State extremists, posted Saturday, May 23, 2015, purports to show a suicide bomber,  with the Arabic bar below reading: "Urgent: The heroic martyr Abu Amer al-Najdi, the attacker of the (Shiite) temple in Qatif",  which the Islamic State group's radio station claimed responsibility for.  Al-Bayan, the Islamic State radio targeting potential European recruits, touts recent triumphs in the campaign to carve out a Caliphate with contrast between the smooth, Western-style production and the extremist content showing how far the hardcore Islamic propaganda machine has come since its beginnings in 2012.  (Militant photo via AP, FILE)

This file image taken from a militant website associated with ISIS extremists, posted Saturday, May 23, 2015, purports to show a suicide bomber. A soldier in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, prompted an alert at the military base after he went to a Halloween party dressed as a suicide bomber, complete with false bombs. AP

WASHINGTON, United States — A US Army base went on alert after a soldier dressed for Halloween as a suicide bomber with a simulated explosives vest tried to get onto the compound.

The prank unfolded Friday night at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, which is home to US Army airborne and special operations forces.

“The incident resulted in an emergency response,” the base said in a statement, adding that ordnance disposal teams cleared the area and a gate was closed.

“Costumes of this sort are not allowed on Fort Bragg,” the base said.

Fort Bragg later removed the statement from its website, stating that comments posted on it had been “either profane, sophomoric, or did not treat the subject seriously.”

“Please take note that this is a family-friendly website meant to inform and keep our families safe, many of whom have directly felt the effects of real — not costumed — suicide bombers,” a later statement said.

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