The Sunday Guardian

‘right timE to droP hugE bombs in afghanista­n’

The death toll in Thursday’s ‘Mother of All Bombs’ attack in the eastern province of Nangarhar rose to 94 on Saturday.

- ACHIN, AFGHANISTA­N/KABUL REUTERS

The top US military commander in Afghanista­n said on Friday that the decision to deploy one of the largest convention­al bombs ever used in combat was purely tactical, and made as part of the campaign against Islamic State-linked fighters.

As many as 94 suspected Islamic State militants were killed in the strike on Thursday evening in the eastern province of Nangarhar, Afghan defense officials said, adding there were no civilian casualties.

Amaq, the news agency affiliated with Islamic State in the Middle East, carried a statement denying that the group had suffered casualties in the attack, citing an unidentifi­ed source who had been in contact.

The statements could not be independen­tly verified, and on Friday Afghan and foreign troops in the vicinity were not allowing reporters or locals to approach the scene of the blast.

The strike came as US President Donald Trump prepares to dispatch his first high-level delegation to Kabul, amid uncertaint­y about his plans for the nearly 9,000 American troops stationed in Afghanista­n.

Nicknamed “the mother of all bombs,” the weapon was dropped from an MC-130 aircraft in the Achin district of Nangarhar, bordering Pakistan.

Nicholson said he was in constant communicat­ion with officials in Washington, but the decision to use the 21,600-pound (9,797-kg) GBU-43 bomb was based on his assessment of military needs and not broader political considerat­ions.

“This was the first time that we encountere­d an extensive obstacle to our progress,” he said of a joint Afghan-U.S. operation that has been targeting Islamic State since March.

“It was the right time to use it tactically against the right target on the battlefiel­d.”

Afghan and U. S. forces were at the scene of the strike and reported that the “weapon achieved its intended purpose,”, Nicholson said.

Afghan Defence Ministry spokesman Dawlat Waziri said no civilians were harmed in the massive blast that targeted a network of caves and tunnels that had been heavily mined. “No civilian has been hurt and only the base, which Daesh used to launch attacks in other parts of the province, was destroyed,” Waziri said in a statement.

He was using an Arabic term that refers to Islamic State, which has establishe­d a small stronghold in eastern Afghanista­n and launched deadly attacks on the capital, Kabul.

The GBU-43 is a GPS-guided munition that had never before been used in combat since its first test in 2003, when it produced a mushroom cloud visible from 20 miles (32 km) away.

The bomb’s destructiv­e power, equivalent to 11 tonnes of TNT, pales in comparison with the relatively small atomic bombs dropped on Japan at the end of World War Two, which had blasts equivalent to between 15,000 and 20,000 tonnes of TNT. Nato forces trying to quell their stubborn insurgency, also denounced the bombing.

“Using this massive bomb cannot be justified and will leave a material and psychologi­cal impact on our people,” the Taliban, who compete with Islamic State in Afghanista­n, said in a statement.

American officials said the bomb had been positioned for possible use in Afghanista­n for “some time” since the administra­tion of former president Barack Obama.

The United States has steadily intensifie­d its air campaign against Islamic State and Taliban militants in Afghanista­n, with the Air Force deploying nearly 500 weapons in the first three months of 2017, up from 300 in the correspond­ing 2016 period.

Thursday’s strike was not the first time Islamic State fighters have been targeted by heavy American bombardmen­t in Nangarhar, where a US special forces soldier was killed battling militants a week ago.

Last year, B- 52 bombers operating out of Qatar flew at least two missions in Afghanista­n for the first time since 2006. Such aircraft can carry as much as 70,000 pounds (32,000 kg) of bombs, missiles, or other weapons on each mission.

In March, US forces conducted 79 “counterter­ror strikes” against Islamic State in Nangarhar, killing as many as 200 militants, according to the US military command in Kabul.

US military officials estimate there are about 600 to 800 Islamic State fighters in Afghanista­n, mostly in Nangarhar, but also in the neighborin­g province of Kunar.

The United Nations has raised concerns that the American air campaign is swelling civilian casualties in Afghanista­n.

Last year, air strikes by internatio­nal forces caused at least 127 civilian deaths and 108 injuries, up from 103 deaths and 67 injuries in 2015, the UN said.

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