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Rocket attack hits Kabul airport hours after Mattis, , NATO chief arrives

SHAFAQNA – The Taliban claimed it fired at least six rockets at Afghanistan’s main airport Wednesday in an attack after US Defense Secretary James Mattis and NATO’s General Secretary Jens Stoltenberg arrived in the country on an unannounced visit.

No one was injured and Mattis had left the airport in the capital Kabul hours beforehand, according to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani.

The defense secretary was in the country for an unannounced visit alongside NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg. It was his first trip to Afghanistan since President Donald Trump announced a new strategy for America’s longest war.

Although the trip was not publicized, two Taliban commanders told NBC News on condition of anonymity that their “insiders” in the Afghan security establishment and at Kabul airport had tipped them off in advance.

“We fired six rockets and planned to hit the plane of U.S. secretary of defense and other U.S. and NATO military officials,” said one of the commanders. “We were told by our insiders that some losses were caused to their installations but we are not sure about James Mattis.”

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed the Taliban’s claim of responsibility and said their target was the defense secretary and other U.S. officials.

Just because a militant group lays claim to an attack does not mean it was actually responsible.

ISIS, which has built up a presence in Afghanistan and opposes the Taliban, issued a competing claim of responsibly via its affiliated news agency, Amaq, according to Reuters and others.

ISIS and the Taliban have claimed responsibility for the same attack before, notably in June last year when the rival militant groups said they were behind a deadly car bomb in Kabul.

The Afghan president confirmed that “there has been an attack” and said Afghan special forces were dealing with the situation.

Najeeb Danish, a spokesperson with the Afghan interior ministry, said that six rockets were fired, and that security forces had surrounded two houses near the airport in their search for suspects.

All departures and arrivals at the airport were canceled for at least two hours, according to the country’s ministry for civil aviation.

The Pentagon officially acknowledges 8,400 troops are on the ground in Afghanistan, but defense officials said last month that number actually hovers between 11,000 and 12,000.

Earlier this month, Mattis said earlier this month that the U.S. would send an additional 3,000 troops to the country.

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