Afghan rocket attack damages US military chief's plane
AFGHANISTAN: A rocket fired on a US airbase in Afghanistan early
Tuesday damaged the aircraft of America's top military officer and
wounded two maintenance crew, officers said.
Two insurgent rockets struck the vast Bagram air field overnight,
with one causing damage to the C-17 used by General Martin Dempsey,
chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, who left the base using
another plane, his spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan said.
Shrapnel from the rocket struck the door of the plane while it was
parked on the runway, with two American maintenance crew suffering minor
injuries in the attack, Lapan said. The attack posed no threat to the
safety of Dempsey or his staff, who were asleep in their quarters at the
time of the incident, officers said.
Although sporadic shelling of Bagram is not uncommon, Taliban
insurgents rarely manage to inflict serious damage or casualties at the
base, according to military reports.
Dempsey had been visiting Kabul to meet commanders of the NATO-led
force and Afghan top brass amid a surge in assaults by Afghan security
personnel on their international colleagues. AFP
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