*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~* { Sila lawat Laman Hizbi-Net - http://www.hizbi.net } { Hantarkan mesej anda ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] } { Iklan barangan? Hantarkan ke [EMAIL PROTECTED] } *~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~* PAS : KE ARAH PEMERINTAHAN ISLAM YANG ADIL ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Attackers fire on U.S. Kandahar base Fuel plane crashes elsewhere; no deaths in either incident
Feb. 13 — No U.S. casualties were reported after unknown attackers opened fire late Wednesday on U.S. positions along the western edge of the main U.S. base in Afghanistan, an Army spokesman said. In a separate incident, an Air Force refueling aircraft crashed in a remote region of the country. No one on board was killed. AMERICAN forces did suffer one casualty, though, when an Army soldier based at the Bagram airfield 40 miles north of the capital, Kabul, died from injuries he suffered when a heavy piece of equipment he was working on fell on him. The soldier’s name was being withheld until his family could be notified. The nighttime incident at the U.S. base at the airport in Kandahar lasted about 30 minutes and was intense for a period of about five minutes. Apache helicopter gunships were scrambled, but it was unclear whether they opened fire. Troops from the Army’s 101st Airborne Division, based at Fort Campbell, Ky., did return fire, however, according to Maj. A.C. Roper, a spokesman at the Kandahar base, known as Camp Rhino. All lights at the base were turned off except those illuminating a high-security jail holding prisoners of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network and the former ruling Taliban. Navy Cmdr. Frank Merriman, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command, which is coordinating the U.S. military campaign in Afghanistan, said seven people detained by U.S. troops turned out to be “friendly” Afghan troops contracted to provide security for the base. “In the confusion that resulted from this thing, they were initially detained,” Merriman told the news agency Agence France-Presse. “Once it was determined who they were, they were released.” Marine Maj. Ralph Mills, another Central Command spokesman, told reporters that three other people seen near the airfield managed to escape in a vehicle. About 4,100 military personnel are based at Kandahar, most of them from the United States. Advertisement Last month, U.S. forces seized a cache of weapons under a building and in tunnels near the base a few days after as many as 14 gunmen armed with AK-47 assault rifles briefly fired toward U.S. positions. No U.S. troops were hurt in that incident. NO DEATHS IN AIRCRAFT CRASH In the air crash Wednesday, eight crew members were injured when their Lockheed MC-130P Combat Shadow turboprop went down about 2:50 a.m. (5:20 p.m. ET Tuesday), U.S. officials told NBC News, which first reported the incident. Seven of the crew members were able to walk, and none of the injuries were considered life-threatening, Marine Maj. Brad Lowell, a Central Command spokesman, said Wednesday. Central Command revealed few details about the incident in a statement Wednesday, other than that it occurred in a remote area in eastern Afghanistan. The statement did not say what sort of operation was under way. Military officials told NBC’s Tammy Kupperman, however, that enemy fire did not cause the crash. The Combat Shadow is a long-range refueling plane attached to Air Force special operations missions. It is designed to fly low-threat clandestine missions refueling helicopters over hostile or politically sensitive territory, according to its Air Force specifications sheet. The plane flies without external lighting or communications to avoid detection, which could complicate its recovery. OTHER DEVELOPMENTS The CIA said it had no comment Wednesday on Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s decision to reveal the agency’s increased role in Afghanistan. See the latest images from the war in Afghanistan. Following a week of skeptical news reports alleging that innocent Afghans, not al-Qaida leaders, died in an attack last week by a pilotless surveillance aircraft, Rumsfeld told reporters Tuesday that the strike was carried out by the CIA without the Defense Department’s involvement. A Pentagon spokeswoman denied that the Pentagon was trying to distance itself from the incident. The Pentagon announced Wednesday that it had called up more National Guard and reserve units. The new call-ups, offset by other decreases that reflected the end of some units’ tours of duty, increased the total number of Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine National Guard personnel and reservists on duty by 1,928, to 75,356 from all 50 states. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ( Melanggan ? To : [EMAIL PROTECTED] pada body : SUBSCRIBE HIZB) ( Berhenti ? To : [EMAIL PROTECTED] pada body: UNSUBSCRIBE HIZB) ( Segala pendapat yang dikemukakan tidak menggambarkan ) ( pandangan rasmi & bukan tanggungjawab HIZBI-Net ) ( Bermasalah? Sila hubungi [EMAIL PROTECTED] ) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pengirim: Salam Abdullah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>