Rocket attack kills 1 at NATO base in Afghanistan

Author: 
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Publication Date: 
Mon, 2010-03-15 17:09

NATO confirmed that the sprawling Bagram Air Field, north of the Afghan capital of Kabul, came under attack on Monday, but a spokesman disclosed no details other than the death.
Abdullah Adil, the police chief in the Bagram district of Parwan province, says one rocket was fired onto the base's grounds at about 4 a.m. A Taleban spokesman told The Associated Press that two rockets were fired on the base.
Bagram is home to some 24,000 military personnel and civilian contractors supporting the war against the Taleban insurgency in Afghanistan. While well-protected and located in a relatively quiet area, the more than 5,000-acre (2,000-hectare) base is still susceptible to rocket and mortar attacks. Last year, insurgents launched more than a dozen attacks on Bagram, killing at least four people.
The main air field is in the midst of an expansion to accommodate some of the 30,000 new American troops that President Barack Obama ordered to Afghanistan late last year to try to turn the tide of the war.
NATO and Afghan forces last month launched the largest combined offensive against the Taleban since the hard-line Islamists were driven from power in 2001. The push secured the one-time Taleban stronghold and opium-producing center of Marjah in the southern province of Helmand.
The next major offensive is planned for later this year in next-door Kandahar province, where the insurgents retain a strong presence. On Saturday, the Taleban detonated several bombs in the provincial capital of Kandahar city, killing 35 people in what the militants said was a “warning” that they are ready to fight.
On Monday in eastern Afghanistan, police said Afghan security forces killed three suicide bombers in Paktika province before they could launch an attack on security posts in Barmal district.
Separately in Ghazni province, Afghan police say three civilians were killed and three others were wounded when their vehicle hit a roadside mine while they were moving household goods.
Also Monday, the US military confirmed that an unmanned Predator drone aircraft crashed on takeoff in southern Afghanistan. The crash late Sunday night was not caused by enemy fire and the site was quickly secured, an Air Force release said.
Predator and Reaper unmanned drones have become crucial tools for the US military in Afghanistan and Iraq, both for their reconnaissance value and their ability to fire missiles at enemy positions. The CIA runs a separate covert program that targets Al-Qaeda and Taleban leaders across the border in Pakistan.

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