Explosions hit military bases

1 U.S. soldier reported killed by bomber in east

KABUL, Afghanistan - An explosion hit one of the entrances to a predominantly U.S. military base in the heart of Kabul on Saturday, hours after a separate suicide bombing in eastern Afghanistan killed a U.S. service member - the first combat casualty of the year.

Neither the extent of the explosion at the base, Camp Eggers, nor what caused it was immediately clear, though the U.S.-led coalition said it inflicted no casualties. The Afghan police also said they had no reports of deaths or injuries from the blast at Camp Eggers or from a separate explosion that appeared to have gone off about the same time a few miles away.

The second blast was caused by a mine that had been dropped into a drainage ditch, the police said.

The Taliban quickly claimed responsibility for setting off the explosion at Camp Eggers, which occurred about 7:30 p.m. But the insurgentsdid not say what kind of bomb was used, and officials with the U.S.-led military coalition said they were still trying to determine what had happened. They would confirm only that there had been an explosion “in the vicinity” of Camp Eggers.

Within 20 minutes of the blast, which could be heard throughout much of central Kabul, alarms at the base began going off. The alarms were followed by an announcement on the camp’s loudspeaker that said there had been an explosion at one of the gates.

The announcement then instructed the thousands of service members based there to load their weapons and stay where they were. All the troops tasked with protecting the base were told to take uptheir posts, as were those assigned to fight fires.

Camp Eggers is a short walk from the presidential palace, the headquarters of the U.S.-led coalition and the U.S. Embassy, along with a handful of other diplomatic missions. The area is heavily fortifiedwith concrete barriers and cut off from the rest of the city by checkpoints operated by the Afghan police and private security guards.

The insurgents, who routinely inflate the number of deaths caused by their attacks, said Saturday’s explosion had inflicted coalition losses, Reuters reported, citing an email from the militants.

Earlier in the day, the Taliban claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at a joint U.S. and Afghan military base in eastern Afghanistan.

Afghan officials said at least five suicide bombers assaulted the base in Nangarhar province shortly after dawn, and a U.S. service member was killed in the first blast. The remaining attackers were killed in the ensuing firefight, said Ahmad ZiaAbdulzai, a spokesman for the provincial government.

The coalition confirmed that one of its soldiers had been killed in eastern Afghanistan.

Information for this article was contributed by Jawad Sukhanyar of The New York Times.

Front Section, Pages 9 on 01/05/2014

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