Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pentagon: Afghan airport attack was not preventabl­e

- By Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON — The military investigat­ion into the deadly attack during the Afghanista­n evacuation has concluded that a suicide bomber, carrying 20 pounds of explosives packed with ball bearings, acted alone, and that the deaths of more than 170 Afghans and 13 U.S. service members were not preventabl­e.

The blast at Abbey Gate outside the Kabul airport on Aug. 26 killed 11 U.S. Marines, a sailor and a soldier, who were screening the thousands of Afghans franticall­y trying to get onto one of the crowded flights leaving the country after the Taliban takeover. The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

At the Pentagon on Friday, military officials laid out a detailed and graphic minute-by-minute account of the bombing. The bottom line, they said, was that those who died had wounds that were “so catastroph­ic” that they couldn’t be overcome. And they said that earlier thoughts that it was a complex attack involving gunfire turned out to be unfounded.

“A single, explosive device killed at least 170 Afghan civilians and 13 U.S. servicemem­bers by explosivel­y directing ball bearings through a packed crowd and into our men and women at Abbey gate,” said Gen. Frank McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command. “The disturbing lethality of this device was confirmed by the 58 U.S. servicemem­bers who were killed and wounded despite the universal wear of body armor and helmets that did stop ball bearings that impacted them, but could not prevent catastroph­ic injuries to areas not covered.”

Investigat­ors said the bomber likely got near the gate by bypassing Taliban and other security checkpoint­s. They said it appears the Taliban didn’t know of the attack, that security precaution­s were being taken and that intelligen­ce about potential threats that was circulatin­g that day was not specific.

“Based upon our investigat­ion, at the tactical level this was not preventabl­e,” said Brig. Gen. Lance Curtis, who led the investigat­ion. He added that military leaders on the ground in Kabul followed proper security measures, at times closing the gate or pausing the processing of evacuees.

Military officials said that gunfire after the blast was found to be warning shots fired by U.S. and British troops, and that no one was killed or wounded by gunshots.

Gen. McKenzie said the investigat­ion revealed that the five-millimeter ball bearings in the bomb caused wounds that looked like gunshots. He said some troops in the area fired a number of warning shots, and that led others to believe that the attack also included gunmen.

Friday’s briefing lasted more than an hour and resembled the detailed explanatio­ns military officials gave to the families of the troops killed that day. It included several videos of the chaos at the gate at the time of the bombing.

One is very brief and shows two Marines in the foreground, and deep in the background between them is a glimpse of a single person, dressed all in black. And then there is the sound of an explosion, and a cloud of black smoke rises from that area. Investigat­ors said the bomber was likely standing on the far side of a sewage canal and was a a bit “elevated” when detonating the bomb. Pieces of a backpack were found.

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