TO GO WITH AFGHANISTAN-US-ARMY-CONFLICT-FOCUS BY GUILLAUME DECAMME
In this photograph taken on August 13, 2015, US army soldiers walk as a NATO helicopter flies overhead at coalition force Forward Operating Base (FOB) Connelly in the Khogyani district in the eastern province of Nangarhar. From his watchtower in insurgency-wracked eastern Afghanistan, US army Specialist Josh Whitten doesn't have much to say about his Afghan colleagues. "They don't come up here anymore, because they used to mess around with our stuff. "Welcome to Forward Operating Base Connelly, where US troops are providing training and tactical advice to the 201st Afghan army corps as they take on the Taliban on the battlefield. AFP PHOTO / Wakil Kohsar        (Photo credit should read WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/Getty Images)
U.S. slows military drawdown in Afghanistan
02:19 - Source: CNN

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According to Pentagon spokesman Capt. Jeff Davis, the plane was hit by small arms fire, damaging one of the plane's stabilizers

The pilot returned the plane safely back to Bagram Airfield, where he landed unharmed

Washington CNN  — 

An American F-16 took fire over Afghanistan last Tuesday, forcing the pilot to make an unscheduled landing.

The Pentagon did not disclose the incident until media reports emerged.

According to Pentagon spokesman Capt. Jeff Davis, the plane was hit by small-arms fire, damaging one of the plane’s stabilizers. That forced the pilot to jettison two external fuel tanks and three pieces of munitions before landing safely.

A statement from the U.S.-led NATO coalition later on Monday said the F-16 “encountered fire in the Paktia Province in Afghanistan, which hit one of the aircraft’s stabilizers and damaged one of the munitions.”

Graphics tell story: U.S. troops remain in Afghanistan through 2016

The pilot, U.S. Air Force Capt. Susan Harrington said in the statement, returned the plane safely back to Bagram Airfield, where he landed unharmed.

“Our pilots routinely face threats from the ground, however they are well-trained and prepared to respond to any threat or attack,” she said.

She added that until an investigation on the incident has been completed, the military would not know what type of weapons were used.

A Pentagon official, though, said that the presumption is that it was small arms because if it were a missile, the plane likely would have gone down.