The Borneo Post

US drops ‘Mother of all Bombs’ on IS in Afghan

Dozens of militants killed as bomb smashes mountain hideouts

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JALALABAD, Afghanista­n: The US military’s largest nonnuclear bomb killed dozens of Islamic State militants as it smashed their mountain hideouts, Afghan officials said yesterday, ruling out any civilian casualties despite the weapon’s destructiv­e power.

The GBU- 43/ B Massive Ordnance Air Blast bomb — dubbed the ‘Mother Of All Bombs’ and unleashed in combat for the first time — hit IS positions in eastern Nangarhar province on Thursday.

The bomb is expected to further erode IS’s capabiliti­es in Afghanista­n and sends a warning to the much bigger Taliban group ahead of their annual spring offensive.

“As a result of the bombing, key Daesh ( IS) hideouts were destroyed and 36 IS fighters were killed,” the Afghan defence ministry said, adding that the bombing was carried out in coordinati­on with local military forces.

The huge bomb, delivered via an MC-130 transport plane, has a blast yield equivalent to 11 tonnes of TNT. It was originally designed as much to intimidate foes as to clear broad areas.

The explosion reverberat­ed for miles and engulfed the remote area in towering flames, destroying what Afghan officials called a network of undergroun­d IS tunnels and caves that had been mined against convention­al ground attacks.

The bombardmen­t took place amid rising global tensions as the US military steps up raids against global jihadist groups.

It comes only a week after US President Donald Trump ordered missile strikes against Syria in retaliatio­n for a suspected chemical attack, and as China warned of the potential for conflict amid rising US tensions with North Korea.

Trump hailed the mission in Achin district as ‘ very, very successful’.

An Afghan militant source told AFP from an undisclose­d location that local residents had described the ground shaking ‘like an earthquake’, with people being knocked unconsciou­s by the blast.

“People have started leaving the area fearing more bombings,” he said.

Another militant source told AFP that 800 to 1,000 IS fighters were believed to be hiding in the area.

The arsenal was dropped after fighting intensifie­d over the past week and US- backed ground forces struggled to advance on the area. An American special forces soldier was killed last Saturday in Nangarhar while conducting anti-IS operations.

Security experts say IS had built their redoubts close to civilian homes, but the government said thousands of local families had already fled the area in recent months of fighting.

“Precaution­s were taken to avoid civilian casualties,” President Ashraf Ghani said on Twitter, throwing his support behind the bombardmen­t.

It was “designed to support the efforts of the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) and US forces... conducting clearance operations in the region.”

The Pentagon’s announceme­nt of the attack drove markets down, with Asian bourses headed south following overnight losses on Wall Street.

It added to concerns among investors already wary of risks over Syria and North Korea, as well as the outcome of the French presidenti­al election.

The Taliban, who are expected to soon announce the start of this year’s fighting season, also condemned what it called ‘America’s heavy use of weapons on Afghanista­n’.

Nangarhar, which borders Pakistan, is a hotbed of IS militancy. US forces have conducted a number of air strikes on jihadist bases in the area since August last year. IS, notorious for its reign of terror in Syria and Iraq, has been making inroads into Afghanista­n in recent years. It has attracted disaffecte­d members of the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban as well as Uzbek Islamists. But the group has been steadily losing territory in the face of heavy pressure both from US air strikes and a ground offensive led by Afghan forces.

As a result of the bombing, key Daesh (IS) hideouts were destroyed and 36 IS fighters were killed. Afghan defence ministry

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 ??  ?? A video grab from 2003 file footage from the US Air Force (USAF) shows a mushroom cloud created by a GBU-43/B Massive Ordnance Air Blast bomb prototype moments after impact at a test site at Eglin Air Force Base, in Florida. — AFP photo Trump gestures as he arrives at Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport in West Palm Beach, Florida, for the Good Friday holiday and Easter weekend. — Reuters photo
A video grab from 2003 file footage from the US Air Force (USAF) shows a mushroom cloud created by a GBU-43/B Massive Ordnance Air Blast bomb prototype moments after impact at a test site at Eglin Air Force Base, in Florida. — AFP photo Trump gestures as he arrives at Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport in West Palm Beach, Florida, for the Good Friday holiday and Easter weekend. — Reuters photo

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