Taliban claims they downed plane carrying high-ranking US officers in Afghanistan

Taliban militants have claimed they shot down a US
military aircraft over Ghazni in central Afghanistan, killing everyone on
board. US military says it’s investigating the crash, and has not yet confirmed
the loss of the plane.
A Taliban spokesman has affirmed the group’s
responsibility for the crash, saying that the aircraft’s crew and everyone on
board, including what he claimed were high-ranking officers, were killed on the
spot.
A U.S. military aircraft crashed in eastern
Afghanistan on Monday, a Taliban spokesman and Afghan journalist affiliated
with the militant group said.
Tariq Ghazniwal, a journalist in the area, said that
he saw the burning aircraft. In an exchange on Twitter, he told The Associated
Press that he saw two bodies and the front of the aircraft was badly burned. He
added that aircraft’s body and tail were hardly damaged. His information could
not be independently verified.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said a U.S.
airforce plane crashed in the Ghazni province. He claimed the crash killed
“lots” of U.S. service members. The militant group often exaggerates casualty
figures.
Ghazniwal said the crash site was about 10 kilometers
from a U.S. military base.
U.S. Army Maj. Beth Riordan, a spokeswoman for U.S.
Central Command, declined to comment when told about the Taliban claim. She
earlier acknowledged American military officials were investigating reports of
a crash in Afghanistan. She said that it remained unclear whose aircraft was
involved in the crash.
Riordan declined to immediately comment further.
However, pictures on social media purportedly from
the crash site showed what could be the remains of a Bombardier E-11A aircraft,
which the U.S. military uses for electronic surveillance over Afghanistan.
Images on social media purportedly of the crashed
plane showed an aircraft bearing U.S. Air Force markings similar to other E-11A
surveillance aircraft photographed by aviation enthusiasts. Visible
registration numbers on the plane also appeared to match those aircraft.
The so-called Battlefield Airborne Communications
Node can be carried on unmanned or crewed aircraft like the E-11A. It is used
by the military to extend the range of radio signals and can be used to convert
the output of one device to another, such as connecting a radio to a telephone.
Colloquially referred to by the U.S. military as
“Wi-Fi in the sky,” the BACN system is used in areas where communications are
otherwise difficult, elevating signals above obstacles like mountains. The
system is in regular use in Afghanistan.
Local Afghan officials had said earlier on Monday
that a passenger place from Afghanistan’s Ariana Airlines had crashed in the
Taliban-held area of the eastern Ghazni province. However, Ariana Airlines told
The Associated Press that none of its planes had crashed in Afghanistan.
The conflicting accounts could not immediately be
reconciled. The number of people on board and their fate was not immediately
known, nor was the cause of the crash.
Arif Noori, spokesman for the provincial governor,
said the plane went down around 1:10 p.m. local time (8:40 a.m. GMT) in Deh Yak
district, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) southwest of the capital Kabul. He
said the crash site is in territory controlled by the Taliban. Two provincial
council members also confirmed the crash.
But the acting director for Ariana Airlines, Mirwais
Mirzakwal, dismissed reports that one the company’s aircraft had crashed. The
state-owned airline also released a statement on its website saying all its
aircraft were operational and safe.
The mountainous Ghazni province sits in the
foothills of the Hindu Kush mountains and is bitterly cold in winter. The
Taliban currently control or hold sway over around half the country.
The last major commercial air crash in Afghanistan
occurred in 2005, when a Kam Air flight from the western city of Herat to Kabul
crashed into the mountains as it tried to land in snowy weather.
The war, however, has seen a number of deadly
crashes of military aircraft. One of the most spectacular occurred in 2013 when
an American Boeing 747 cargo jet crashed shortly after takeoff from Bagram
airbase north of Kabul en route to Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. All seven
crew member were killed. The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board
investigation found that large military vehicles were inadequately secured and
had shifted during flight, causing damage to the control systems that “rendered
the airplane uncontrollable.”