The U.S. military has sent fighter jets to Afghanistan's northern province of Kunduz, where Taliban insurgents have launched a major offensive and overrun government checkpoints close to the main city, U.S. and Afghan sources said.
The US military declined to say why the jets had been dispatched to the area, but confirmed they were on a mission outside regular operations. "We can confirm there were U.S. jet aircraft flying in the Kunduz area in the past 72 hours, no munitions dropped," a U.S. military spokesman said, but declined to comment further.
Officials this week said hundreds of Taliban militants had attacked police and army checkposts in the province, the insurgents' last stronghold before U.S.-led forces drove them from power in 2001. Two airstrikes were conducted in the province, the interior ministry said in an internal report, including one in the city district on Monday.
The coalition combat mission in Afghanistan ended last year, and only a small contingent of around 1,800 U.S. counter-terrorism troops are still involved in combat operations. Last year the U.S. military said it would no longer support Afghan security forces in routine combat operations, except "in extremis", or in emergencies, to avoid mass casualties.