KABUL, Aug 22: A militant rocket attack damaged the plane of the top US general as it sat parked at a coalition base in Afghanistan on Tuesday, dealing another blow to the image of progress in building a stable country as foreign forces work to wind down the 10-year-old war.
The Taliban claimed responsibility for the two rockets that hit the C-17 transport plane that US Army Gen Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, flew into Bagram Air Field north of Kabul on a day earlier.
The claim was an attempt by the militants to score more propaganda points in what has been a deadly few weeks for the international coalition in Afghanistan.
Jamie Graybeal, a spokesman for the US military and the international coalition, said Dempsey was in his staff quarters when the two rockets landed and was unhurt in the attack. But the damage to the plane forced Dempsey to use another aircraft for his flight from Bagram to Iraq on Tuesday.
Two aircraft maintenance workers were lightly wounded by shrapnel, and a nearby helicopter was damaged, Graybeal said.
Dempsey was in Afghanistan for talks with military leaders about the war as well as a disturbing rash of killings of US military trainers by their Afghan partners or militants dressed in Afghan uniform.
Such attacks — which the Taliban also said they are behind — killed 10 Americans in the last two weeks alone, threatening morale and raising questions about the strategy to train Afghan security forces so they could fight the militancy after foreign troops end their combat role in 2014.
Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid issued a statement claiming that Dempsey’s aircraft was targeted by militants “using exact information” about its whereabouts.
Graybeal, however, rejected the claim, saying militant rocket and mortar attacks were “not infrequent” at Bagram and that such fire most often came from so far away that it was virtually impossible to hit specific targets.
Pentagon spokeswoman Maj Cathy Wilkinson also denied the strike was aimed specifically at Dempsey’s plane.—AP