AFGHANISTAN —
The US military has dropped an enormous bomb in Afghanistan, according to four
US military officials with direct knowledge of the mission.
A GBU-43/B
Massive Ordnance Air Blast Bomb (MOAB), nicknamed the “mother of all bombs,”
was dropped at 7:32 pm local time Thursday, the sources said. A MOAB is a
21,600-pound, GPS-guided munition that is America’s most powerful non-nuclear
bomb.
The bomb was
dropped by an MC-130 aircraft, stationed in Afghanistan and operated by Air
Force Special Operations Command, Pentagon spokesman Adam Stump told CNN.
Officials said
the target was an ISIS cave and tunnel complex and personnel in the Achin
district of the Nangarhar province.
“The United
States takes the fight against ISIS very seriously and in order to defeat the
group we must deny them operational space, which we did,” White House press
secretary Sean Spicer said later Thursday. The strike “targeted a system of
tunnels and cave that ISIS fighters use to move around freely.”
The military
is currently assessing the damage. Gen. John Nicholson, commander of US forces
in Afghanistan, signed off on the use of the bomb, according to the sources.
The authority to deploy the weapon was granted to Nicholson by the commander of
US Central Command, Gen. Joseph Votel, Stump said.
This is the
first time a MOAB has been used in the battlefield, according to the US
officials. This munition was developed during the Iraq War.
“As ISIS-K’s losses
have mounted, they are using IEDs, bunkers and tunnels to thicken their
defense,” Nicholson said in a statement following the strike.
“This is the
right munition to reduce these obstacles and maintain the momentum of our
offensive against ISIS-K,” Nicholson added.
“US forces
took every precaution to avoid civilian casualties with this strike. US Forces
will continue offensive operations until ISIS-K is destroyed in Afghanistan,”
read the statement from US Forces Afghanistan.
The extent of
the damage and whether anyone was killed is not yet clear. The military is
currently conducting an assessment.
The Pentagon
is currently reviewing whether to deploy additional trainers to Afghanistan to
help bolster US allies there.
The Achin
district is the primary center of ISIS activity in Afghanistan. A US Army
Special Forces soldier was killed fighting the terror group there Saturday.
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