The Taliban and ETIM were commingled on the facilities that were bombed, and often work together, said Air Force Brig. Gen. Lance R. Bunch, the director of future operations at the U.S.-led military headquarters in Kabul. The strikes included three Humvees and two Ford Ranger pickup trucks that the United States once provided to Afghan troops and were in the process of being converted into rolling suicide bombs.

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“Anybody that is an enemy of Afghanistan, we’re going to target them,” Bunch said in a phone interview. “We’ve got new authorities now that allow us to be able to . . . target the Taliban and the ETIM where they previously thought they were safe.”

The new authorities were approved in August by Trump, and the United States has escalated the air campaign ever since. While U.S. officials have declined to say what specifically they entail, there is broad agreement that they have allowed the U.S. military to expand how frequently it strikes. The Air Force dropped 4,361 bombs in Afghanistan last year, as opposed to 1,337 in 2016 and 947 in 2015, according to service statistics.

The ETIM comprises ethnic Uyghur militants who want to form a separate state in or near the western Xinjiang region of China. The group’s emir is believed to be Abdul Haq al Turkistani, who has been on al-Qaeda’s leadership council and was targeted by the Treasury Department in 2009 for his associations with other terrorists, said Thomas Joscelyn, a senior editor with the Long War Journal, which tracks terrorist organizations. The group threatened attacks on the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing.

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The militants once had a home across the Afghan border in Pakistan, but were pushed out of the North Waziristan region in 2015 as the U.S. reduced the number of troops in Afghanistan and the Pakistani military ran a series of counterterrorism operations on its side of the border, said Michael Kugelman, who analyzes terrorist groups for the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

“It’s a group that has really flown under the radar in many ways in the broader constellation of terrorist organizations,” Kugelman said. “It typically has local aims, but I don’t think we should ever take light any group with ties to al-Qaeda.”

The group has expanded its operations in recent years. Under the TIP acronym, it fought in Syria alongside groups linked to al-Qaeda, according to an assessment released in November by the International Centre for Counterterrorism at The Hague.

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Air Force Maj. Gen. James B. Hecker, the commander of the coalition’s air command in Afghanistan, told reporters Wednesday that there has been a “change in weight of effort” recently in U.S. intelligence-gathering that has provided U.S. commanders with more information about potential targets. The United States also has added additional aircraft, including MQ-9 Reaper drones and a squadron of A-10C attack jets in southern Afghanistan.

“With the current uplift in resources, we can decimate Taliban command-and-control nodes,” Hecker said. “That means we can strike at the heart of training camps, where they brainwash young men to strap on a suicide vest, to kill themselves and their fellow Afghans, who are working to rebuild the country.”

It’s not clear how many other facilities might be targeted, or what it will take to turn the tide. The U.S. military highlighted strikes this week near Bahram Chah, a border crossing town in southern Helmand province. Bunch said there also have been strikes recently in Nangarhar, an eastern province where the Islamic State has maintained a presence.

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Kugelman said the fact that there are so many apparent targets shows how rapidly security in Afghanistan has deteriorated over the past few years.