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The aftermath of the US military's "Mother of All Bombs" in Afghanistan.

A remote area in Afghanistan barely shows signs from the US military’s “Mother of All Bombs,” its largest non-nuclear device ever deployed in combat — a scarred mountainside, burned trees and ruined mud-brick structures.

Images and video from the blast site also offer little evidence of how much human damage it inflicted, though Afghan officials last week said 94 militants were killed, Reuters reported.

Since the GBU-43 Massive Ordnance Air Blast bomb was dropped on a fortified tunnel complex used by suspected ISIS jihadists in Nangarhar province, access to the site has been controlled by US and Afghan troops battling the terror group.

A witness viewed the site from several hundred yards away because the US military said that continued fighting prevented reporters or independent investigators from getting close.

The 21,600-pound bomb’s destructive power is equivalent to 11 tons of TNT, which pales in comparison with the relatively small atomic bombs dropped on Japan at the end of World War II. Those had blasts equivalent to between 15,000 and 20,000 tons of TNT.

Within a few hundred feet of the apparent ground zero, leaves remained intact on trees, belying initial expectations that the blast may have sent a destructive wave for up to a mile.

US officials said the bomb was used to target tunnels and destroy landmines and other booby traps laid by the extremists holed up in the mountains, but the witness said there was no obvious crater or bodies visible at the scene.

Several hundred yards from the blast site, Afghan soldiers explored a large tunnel dug beneath a home. It was strung with electric cables and light bulbs and strewn with rugs, cushions and men’s clothing.

One cave was believed to have once held prisoners, but was unused at the time of the strike, according to soldiers at the scene.

US Secretary of Defense James Mattis — who arrived unannounced in Afghanistan on Monday — told reporters last week that US troops would not be digging into the site to determine how many people may have been killed.

“Frankly, digging into tunnels to count dead bodies is probably not a good use of our troops’ time when they are chasing down the enemy that is still capable,” he said.

Mattis arrived hours after his Afghan counterpart resigned over a deadly Taliban attack on an army base that triggered anger and left the embattled army in disarray, Agence France-Presse reported.

He arrived as Afghan security forces were reeling after the resignations of Defense Minister Abdullah Habibi and army chief Qadam Shah Shaheem.

Gunmen in soldiers’ uniforms and wearing suicide vests opened fire at unarmed troops in a mosque and dining hall in one of the deadliest-ever Taliban attacks on an Afghan military target.

Authorities have so far ignored calls to break down the official toll of more than 100 soldiers killed or wounded.

Kabul was the final stop on a six-nation, weeklong tour Mattis said was intended to shore up relations with allies and partners and to get an update on the stalemated conflict in Afghanistan.

Gen. John Nicholson, the top US commander in Kabul, has told Congress he needs a few thousand more troops to keep Afghan security forces on track to eventually handling the Taliban insurgency on their own.

The US, which has about 9,800 troops in Afghanistan, ended its combat mission against the Taliban in 2014, but the forces are increasingly involved in backing up Afghan forces on the battlefield.

With Post wires