6A - Wednesday September 12, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily com Insurgent attack on base kills three, destroys NATO chopper *I Additional suicide bomber attack kills five people KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Afghan insurgents bombarded a U.S. base and destroyed a NATO helicopter, killing three Afghan intelligence employees, officials said Tuesday. There were also NATO personnel aboard and wounded, the coalition said with- out providing further details. Separately, a teenage suicide bomber on Tuesday walked into a shop in western Afghanistan and blew himself up, killing five people, Afghan officials said. The bombing and the strike at Bagram Air Field outside Kabul came as U.S. and its allied mili- tary forces marked the 11th anni- versary ofthe Sept.11, 2001, terror attacks with a tribute to the more than 3,000 foreign troops killed since the invasion of Afghanistan - including about 2,000 mem- bers of the U.S. military. The attacks were a reminder that the Afghan war launched less than a month after 9/11 con- tinues to rage, with insurgents waging a ceaseless campaign against the U.S.-led NATO coalition and the Afghan gov- ernment. "Eleven years on from that day there should be no doubt that our dedication to this com- mitment, that commitment that was seared into our souls that day so long ago, remains strong and unshaken, " said Marine Gen John Allen, the top com- mander of U.S. and coalition troops, at a ceremony at NATO's Kabul headquarters. "Today we remember the vic- tims here in Afghanistan who have suffered so horribly at the hands of al-Qaida and the Tali- ban and other terrorists," he said. "Perhaps more significant to all of us at this ceremony, today we remember the pre- cious soldiers and civilians of all nations lost in Afghanistan since that day of infamy in 2001." Allen hailed the troops fight- ing in Afghanistan as the "next greatest generation," a reference to those who fought in World War II. "A generation that has been at war for 11 years, the longest war in most of our nations' modern histories. Many of you standing here today are on your second, third, fourth, and sometimes even fifth tours in this fight," Allen said. After the short ceremony, he swore in eight members of the U.S. military, who decided to re- enlist on the anniversary of the attacks. "I think it is a great honor to be able to re-enlist on September 11," said SFC Isaac D. Engle, 30, from Salem, Oregon. A member of the Oregon National Guard, the 10-year veteran was heading home in less than a week after serving a year in Afghanistan. The attack on the sprawl- ing Bagram Air Field occurred around 10 p.m. Monday. Mili- tants occasionally fire mortars or rockets at Bagram, but the attacks usually cause little or no damage. The Taliban claimed respon- sibility for the attack. "Four rounds hit," coalition spokesman Army Maj. Adam Wojack said, adding that it was unclear whether they were rockets or mortars. "One of the rounds hit the helicopter and started a fire, which destroyed it." Vice President Joe Biden visits with patrons over lunch at Cruisers Diner in Seaman, Ohio. Biden buddied up with bikers, posed for countless pictures at a pizza place and downed an ice cream cone at a Dairy Queen over the weekend. B iden, in road trip across Ohio, says it feels like home 1 V( ba CH He bu for co place cone a Joe Th whett Presi Th the st end i camp trip. sister Gov. friend remin Penns in Scr "TI home moutt line. Vice President here. I've been here a lot - and I plan on coming back alot." Biden makes good on that ters in crucial promise Wednesday, when he campaigns in Dayton - his ttleground state third trip to Ohio in the past two weeks. Obama will travel to Columbus and Cincinnati on IILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) - Monday, his second visit to Ohio ddied up with bikers, posed this month. untless pictures at a pizza The Democrats' frequent vis- and downed an ice cream its underscore Ohio's role as a at a Dairy Queen. crucial battleground in the race Biden loves Ohio. for president. No Republican has e only question now is won the presidency without win- her Ohio loves him - and ning Ohio, and Biden and Obama dent Barack Obama. are doing everything they can to e vice president toured make sure the state's 18 electoral tate by car over the week- votes stay in the Democratic col- n a journey that was part umn. aign rally, part family road Both Republicans and Demo- Biden, accompanied by his crats say internal surveys show , Valerie, and former Ohio a tight race in Ohio, with Obama Ted Strickland, a longtime narrowly ahead. , said rural southern Ohio Biden's two-day tour through ids him of northeastern central and southern Ohio took sylvania, where he grew up him through parts of the state anton. where Obamais faringthe worst. his is kind of like coming Largelywhite and working class, ," he told a crowd in Ports- towns such as Portsmouth and h, near the Kentucky state Zanesville were hit hard by the "I feel really comfortable recession and have keenly felt the loss of manufacturing jobs in the past decade. The Obama campaign believes Biden's middle-class roots and Everyman style fit rural Ohio, and they have tapped him as a top ambassador to working-class families. In a fiery speech before about 500 people at Zane Grey Elemen- tary, Biden accused Republican Mitt Romney of pursuing poli- cies that would crush the auto industry and other manufactur- ers. "Do the folks in Ohio really think that Gov. Romney, with his views on outsourcing, with his views on General Motors and Chrysler and beyond that, do they honestly believe that if he had been president the last four years that today, that there would be today 115,000 auto jobs in Ohio?" Biden said at the school in Zanesville, a town which won brief fame last year as the place where lions and tigers were released from private cages and then killed. Zanesville is about 55 miles east of Columbus. Flames approach a house in Wenatchee, Wash., about 140 miles east of Seattle, early Tuesday morning. Southwest residents flee from fires Thousands of Tuesday over vast swaths of the West as wildfires forced more people live within residents to flee their homes in severalstates. evacuated areas Fire officials reported seven homes were destroyed and hun- WENATCHEE, Wash. (AP) dreds of people were evacuated - A haze of thick smoke formed near Casper, Wyo., where a wild- fire has burned across almost 24 square miles. In western Mon- tana, fire crews said there was no containment in sight for a Call:4#734-418-4115 blaze that has prompted an evac- Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com uation order for 400 houses west of Hamilton. With winds dying down, MARKETING RESEARCH JOB& fire crews in eastern Washing- PROJECT MANAGER JOB ton were hopeful they could Need business school grad with gain ground on dozens of fires completed market research project, sparked by weekend lightning Must he able to research, communicate, trs u oeeauto & write well.Need a Project Manager storms. 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Resident Shannon Grosdidier and her four daugh- ters delivered oatmeal cookies to several stationed at the end of her street Monday night. "The wind has died down, which is good," she said. "But I've got the photo albums in the car and our overnight bags packed." Only a shed has been lost near Wenatchee, and no injuries have been reported at what appeared to be the most-threatening of numerous wildfires in the state that were sparked by lightning Saturday. In Montana, Sawtooth Fire spokesman Gregg DeNitto with the U.S. Forest Service said there was no word on when res- idents there might be allowed to return. The fire exploded over the past two days from just over 1 square mile to more than 6, although no houses were reported lost. DeNitto said most threatened houses were stilla half-mile to a mile from the fire's edge. An estimated 1,000 people live within the evacuated area, although Ravalli County Com- missioner Suzy Foss said not all of them left. Of those who fled, most were staying with friends, relatives or acquaintances, Foss said. Only a couple of residents spent the night at a Red Cross shelter set up in Hamilton for evacuees, DeNitto said. Firefighters got help from the weather in Wyoming, where cooler temperatures and calmer winds bought time to put more people and equipment into action around two large fires. As many as 750 homes were threatened by the large wildfire near Casper. Some 400 people were evacuated from 150 homes. Firefighters on Tuesday planned to deploy more than a dozen aircraft against the blaze, including two air tankers and seven helicopters. In central Oregon, hazard- ous smoke settled in Sisters for about six hours Tuesday morn- ing as crews battled a forest fire burning on about 4,300 acres southwest of town. Sisters has about 2,000 residents and is a center for tourists and outdoor recreation. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality said atmospheric conditions - atem- perature inversion - could mean poor air quality in the mornings through Saturday. The fire began Sunday in the Three Sisters Wilderness area. Residents of a subdivision west of Sisters have been warned that they might have to evacuate, but the fire has not yet advanced on populated areas. Blazes have scorched more than 8.1 million acres across the West so far this year, up from the 10-year average of 6.1 million acres, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. In Utah, more than 100 proper- ty owners filed a lawsuit Tuesday in state district court blaming a utility for one of the state's largest wildfires this year. The lawsuit against Rocky Mountain Power alleges arcing between power transmission lines sparked the 75-square- mile Wood Hollow Fire, which destroyed 52 cabins or houses in central Utah and left one man dead in June. Rocky Mountain Power told The Associated Press the law- suit is unnecessary because the utility is pursuing out-of-court settlements with dozens of fami- lies. The company has admitted no fault. lk (c)2 2TribuneMedia Services, Inc. 09/12/12 I I i