U.S. increases air power in Afghanistan


A roadside blast killed one NATO soldier and hurt four.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Worried about increasing insurgent attacks in Afghanistan, the U.S. military says it is sending extra air power there by shifting an aircraft carrier away from the Iraq war.

Defense officials said Tuesday that the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln was moved out of the Persian Gulf and to the Gulf of Oman, shortening the time that the carrier’s strike planes must fly to support combat in Afghanistan.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record.

One official said the decision reflects the worsened state of the fight in Afghanistan but improvements in Iraq as well. Since violence is down in Iraq, U.S. defense leadership believes it is possible to focus some air capabilities away from Iraq and toward Afghanistan.

The Navy routinely moves ships in and out of the Persian Gulf, where they not only support America’s two ongoing wars but serve as a show of force to Iran and sign of support to regional allies.

The departure of the aircraft carrier from the Persian Gulf still leaves a number of other ships there, including the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu, other amphibious ships and a couple of destroyers.

There is still also “significant air power” remaining on the ground inside Iraq, one official said.

Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Monday that it appears “security conditions are holding” in Iraq and that important elements of a solution to the war — including reduced levels of sectarian violence, political reconciliation and stronger Iraqi forces — are coming into view more than five years after the U.S. invasion.

Meanwhile in the seventh year of war in Afghanistan, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said last week that he has “real concern” about a sharp rise in attacks in the East, a development he attributed to Pakistan’s failure to put pressure on insurgents there.

Meanwhile, NATO says a roadside bomb blast in eastern Afghanistan killed one of its soldiers and wounded four others. NATO said the soldiers were on patrol in the eastern province of Kunar when the blast struck Tuesday. It did not release the nationality of the dead soldier. Most of the foreign troops in the area are American.