'An ear-splitting blast then it felt like the heavens were falling in': Afghan villagers describe the terrifying moment the US dropped the Mother Of All Bombs on ISIS terrorists

  • The military dropped its largest non-nuclear weapon after targeting a network of ISIS tunnels 
  • A spokesman for the provincial governor in Afghanistan tweeted that 92 militants were killed 
  • GBU-43 weighs 21,600lbs, is 30ft long, contains 11 tons of explosives and carries a mile-wide blast radius 
  • It can create a blast crater more than 300m wide after being dropped from a Hercules MC-130 cargo plane

With an 'ear-splitting blast' heard miles away, the largest non-nuclear bomb ever used in combat left a crater more than 980ft wide after it was dropped by the US on Islamic State terrorists in Afghanistan.

As the repercussions of the Trump administration's latest show of force were felt around the world, details of the huge bomb's formidable force emerged yesterday.

Locals in villages miles away along the war-ravaged nation's borders said they 'felt like the heavens were falling' as the bomb sent a huge fireball into the sky and made the ground shake.

The 21,600lb weapon – nicknamed the 'mother of all bombs' – set fire to the air around it as it exploded and vaporised anyone in the vicinity.

The Pentagon yesterday released aerial footage of Thursday's attack, showing the 30ft bomb – a GBU-43B Massive Ordnance Air Blast or MOAB, the acronym that also gives it its nickname – speeding through the air before the huge explosion in a remote mountainous area of Nangarhar province, near the Pakistan border.

The Afghan ministry of defence said at least 36 IS terrorists hiding in underground tunnels were killed as the bomb released the equivalent of 11 tons of TNT at 7.32pm local time, and that the death toll could rise. Ammunition caches were also destroyed.

Pakistanis living near the Afghan border said the explosion was so loud they thought a bomb had been dropped on their own village by US planes.

Shah Wali, 46, who lives in Goor Gari, nine miles from the border with Nangarhar, said: 'I was sleeping when we heard a loud explosion. It was an ear-splitting blast.

'I jumped from my bed and came out of my home to see what has gone wrong in our village.'

Mufti Khan, a resident of Achin in Nangarhar, said: 'The whole house was shaking. When I came out of my house I saw a large fire and the whole area was burning.'

Another Achin resident, Mohammad Hakim, said: 'We are very happy and these kinds of bombs should be used in future as well, so Daesh is rooted out from here.' Daesh is the Arabic name for IS.

Mr Hakim added: 'They killed our women, youths and elders sitting them on mines. We also ask the Kabul government to use even stronger weapons against them.' Mohammad Shahzadah, who was in another a nearby village, told the Guardian: 'The earth felt like a boat in a storm. I thought my house was being bombed. Last year a drone strike targeted a house next to mine, but this time it felt like the heavens were falling.

'The children and women were very scared.' The MOAB is a 'thermobaric' weapon, setting the air on fire as it explodes 6ft above the ground and sucking in all the surrounding oxygen. It released such a huge blast wave, with a one-mile radius, it would have destroyed anything up to 200ft underground and set off small earthquakes.

General Daulat Waziri, a defence ministry spokesman, said the bombing was necessary because IS's tunnel complex was extremely hard to penetrate, with some as deep as 130ft.

He said: 'It was a strong position and four times we had operations attacking the site but it was not possible to advance.' He added that the road leading to the complex 'was full of mines'.

Inamullah Meyakhil, spokesman for the central hospital in eastern Nangarhar province, said it had received no dead or wounded. District governor Ismail Shinwari said there was no civilian property near the strike. The office of president Ashraf Ghani said they were careful to prevent civilian casualties.

The dropping of the bomb marked the fulfilment of an election promise by Donald Trump, who had said he 'would bomb the s*** out of' IS if he became president.

Mr Trump called Thursday's operation a 'very, very successful mission'.

POWERFUL: New Pentagon video shows the explosive power of the MOAB dropped in Afghanistan

POWERFUL: New Pentagon video shows the explosive power of the MOAB dropped in Afghanistan

US SENT JETS TO EUROPE IN SHOW OF FORCE 

 The US Air Force will deploy a number of F-35 fighter jets to Europe this weekend for several weeks of training in another display of strength, the Pentagon said last night.

They will be there with other US and NATO military aircraft. It did not name the countries where the aircraft would be deployed to but said the purpose was to ‘further demonstrate the operational capabilities’ of the stealth fighter jet.

The F-35 Lightning II is a fifth generation fighter jet, combining advanced stealth with speed and agility. They are used by the US Air Force, Marine Corps and Navy, and by Australia, Britain, Norway, Italy, the Netherlands and Israel. Japan took delivery of its first jet in December.

The deployment to Europe will be as part of the European Reassurance Initiative, a programme initiated in 2014 by the White House to increase US presence in Europe for security purposes.

America is also sending around 40 regular troops to Somalia to help train the country’s army as it battles extremist group al-Shabaab.

The US pulled out of Somalia, which has suffered decades of conflict, after 1993, when two helicopters were shot down and Americans’ bodies were dragged through the streets. 

On the evening of the bombing, the president arrived at his lavish Florida resort Mar-a-Lago, where he was greeted from the plane by flag-waving fans. He gave them a thumbs up as he left the aircraft.

He is expected to remain at Mar-a-Lago for Easter. President Trump was also at the resort when US missile strikes were carried out on a Syrian airbase last week, as a warning to the country's leader Bashar al-Assad following a chemical attack on civilians.

Mr Trump was having an official dinner with Chinese president Xi Jinping as the missiles hit their target. He then conferred with top aides in a specially designed conference room before giving a speech announcing the strikes.

North Korea, led by dictator Kim Jong-un, vowed to 'pulverize' US bases and South Korean capital Seoul if it was threatened by the US military, which is carrying out drills on the Korean peninsula

North Korea, led by dictator Kim Jong-un, vowed to 'pulverize' US bases and South Korean capital Seoul if it was threatened by the US military, which is carrying out drills on the Korean peninsula

The president also had to carry out an impromptu strategy session on Mar-a-Lago's dining patio earlier this year during a visit by Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe after North Korea test-fired ballistic missiles.

Experts have warned Afghanistan is the most rapidly deteriorating conflict in the world, after UK and US troops pulled out in 2014 following a 13-year war. There have been heavy clashes between Afghan forces and IS fighters in the Nangarhar region.

US General John Nicholson, Nato commander in Afghanistan, said the bombing was purely tactical and part of a mission to destroy IS in the country by the end of the year.

He said the 'entire world' should be focused on Afghanistan because terrorism there was of a 'grave concern'. He added: 'This is the right weapon for the right target.'

Despite many celebrating the bombing, some were outraged, saying Afghanistan should not be a 'testing ground'. The Site Intelligence Group, which tracks extremist groups, reported a statement from the Afghan Taliban condemning the US for its 'terrorist' attack. The statement said it is the responsibility of Afghans, not the US, to remove IS from the country.

The US has been carrying out operations in the Korean peninsula alongside Japanese allies to enhance combat readiness

The US has been carrying out operations in the Korean peninsula alongside Japanese allies to enhance combat readiness

Former Afghan president Hamid Karzai condemned the weapon's use on Twitter.

He wrote: 'I vehemently condemn the dropping of the latest weapon, the largest non-nuclear bomb, on Afghanistan by US military.

'This is not the war on terror but the inhuman and most brutal misuse of our country as testing ground for new and dangerous weapons.'

IS's news agency Amaq denied that the strike caused any IS deaths or injuries in a one-line statement put out on its social media channels. 

An initial image shows the rugged landscape where the MOAB was used for the first time in battle

An initial image shows the rugged landscape where the MOAB was used for the first time in battle

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