KABUL, Afghanistan Insurgents launched pre-dawn attacks on a pair of NATO bases in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, but were beaten back after inflicting little damage, the coalition and Afghan police said.
There was no word of casualties among coalition or Afghan security forces, but NATO said at least 10 insurgents were killed and several were captured.
The assaults on the sprawling Forward Operating Base Salerno in Khost province and nearby Camp Chapman, came around 3:00 a.m. 2230 GMT, just as area residents were rising for early morning prayers.
Chapman was the scene of a major attack in December, when a suicide bomber entered the base and killed seven CIA employees.
Maj. Wazir Pacha of the provincial police headquarters said insurgents used rifles, heavy machine guns, rocket propelled grenades, and other heavy weapons, but had been repelled.
"The area is under control, but we still need to find those hiding," he said.
Small arms fire could still be heard in the area midmorning, while NATO helicopters patrolled overhead, according to Associated Press Television.
Police captured a pickup truck laden with ammunition and a light truck packed with explosives that had become stuck in deep mud, Pacha said, adding that police suspected the light truck was an intended suicide truck bomb.
Separately, NATO said one of its patrols mistakenly fired on a vehicle carrying private security contractors in Wardak province west of Kabul, killing two men.
It said the patrol had come under Taliban fire early Saturday, then spotted a vehicle approaching fast from behind with a man shooting out its window.
"It is believed that the private security contractors were returning fire against the same insurgents who had just previously attacked the coalition vehicle, and had increased their speed to break contact," the coalition said in a statement.
The incident was under investigation, it said.
Coalition forces and private security contractors frequently come under small arms fire along the stretch of road known as Highway 2 that runs west through perilous country toward the city of Herat.
On Friday, homemade bombs killed three U.S. troops in southern and eastern Afghanistan, bringing the total of foreign troops killed in Afghanistan this month to 55, including 35 Americans, according to a count by The Associated Press. July was the deadliest month for U.S. forces in Afghanistan since the 2001 invasion, with 66 killed.
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