<Anchor> The



US air strikes an IS vehicle carrying a suicide bomber and heading to Kabul Airport, Afghanistan. This is the second air strike since the Kabul airport attack, and when the news reached the United States, President Biden personally greeted the remains of 13 U.S. soldiers who had returned to the United States.



Correspondent Kim Jong-won from New York.



<Reporter> The



SUV has been completely burned down.



Another was crumpled to the point of being unrecognizable.



ISIS vehicles carrying the bomber were on their way to Kabul Airport, Afghanistan, after the US drone strikes them.



[Witness: I saw a rocket hitting a car. I took children and women out of the house where the bombing took place and took them to the next door.] The



United States announced that it would contain the threat of further terrorism that has continued since the suicide bombing of Kabul Airport on the 26th.



[Jake Sullivan / National Security Adviser, White House: We are doing everything we can to eliminate another threat. It will stop any kind of attack.] The



U.S. military says the target has been successfully cleared, but Afghan officials say three children have been killed in the strike.



There is even a report that 9 people in the family, including 6 children, have been killed, so it seems that the justification of the airstrike will be controversial.




Meanwhile, the remains of 13 U.S. soldiers killed in the Kabul airport attack returned to the United States today.



While the repatriation ceremony was broadcast live across the United States, President Biden went to the airport to personally greet the remains and comfort the bereaved.