<p>When Ezmarai Ahmadi returned home from work on Sunday evening in Kabul, the usual gaggle of squealing children were waiting to greet him -- his sons and daughters, and a slew of nieces and nephews.</p>.<p>He pulled his white sedan into the driveway of a modest house in Kwaja Burga, a densely populated neighbourhood in the northwest of the Afghan capital, and handed the keys to his eldest son to park.</p>.<p>Youngsters piled into the vehicle -- pretending the parking routine was an adventure -- while Ezmarai watched from the side.</p>.<p>Then out of the blue Afghan sky, a missile came screeching down -- striking the car with a terrible force and obliterating the lives of 10 people in an instant.</p>.<p>The United States said Sunday it had destroyed an explosive-laden vehicle in an air strike, thwarting a bid by the Islamic State to detonate a car bomb at Kabul airport.</p>.<p>On Monday, it looked as if they could have made a terrible mistake.</p>.<p>"The rocket came and hit the car full of kids inside our house," said Aimal Ahmadi, Ezmarai's brother.</p>.<p>"It killed all of them."</p>.<p>Aimal said 10 members of the family died in the air strike -- including his own daughter and five other children.</p>.<p>On Monday, when AFP visited the scene of the strike, Aimal was impatiently waiting for other relatives to arrive to help him organise burials for most of his family.</p>.<p>"My brother and his four children were killed. I lost my small daughter.. nephews and nieces," he said disconsolately.</p>.<p>"We are aware of reports of civilian casualties following our strike on a vehicle in Kabul," Captain Bill Urban, a US military spokesman, said in a statement.</p>.<p>The words rang hollow for Aimal, who can scarcely believe his brother could be mistaken for an Islamic State sympathiser, let alone an operative planning a deadly car bomb attack.</p>.<p>Ezmarai was an engineer working with a non-governmental organization -- an ordinary Afghan trying to make ends meet in a turbulent time.</p>.<p>US nerves have been frayed since an IS suicide bomber triggered a massive blast at an entrance to the airport on Thursday, as huge crowds clamoured to get inside in the hope of getting aboard an evacuation flight out of Afghanistan.</p>.<p>Nearly 100 Afghans were killed, and also 13 US service members -- just days before the last American soldier was due to withdraw from the country after a brutal 20-year war.</p>.<p>Against that backdrop, US intelligence had warned of another imminent attack, and on Sunday the US military said it had stopped one before it happened.</p>.<p>"We are still assessing the results of this strike, which we know disrupted an imminent ISIS-K threat to the airport," Urban said Sunday, using an acronym for the Afghan branch of the Islamic State group.</p>.<p>"We know that there were substantial and powerful subsequent explosions resulting from the destruction of the vehicle, indicating a large amount of explosive material inside that may have caused additional casualties," he continued.</p>.<p>"It is unclear what may have happened, and we are investigating further."</p>.<p>When locals heard the blast in the neighbourhood, they swiftly came to see what help they could offer.</p>.<p>"All the children were killed inside the car, the adults were killed just outside. The car was on fire -- we could hardly find body parts," said one, named Sabir.</p>.<p>"We would be deeply saddened by any potential loss of innocent life," the US spokesman said in the statement.</p>.<p>But the words rang hollow for another neighbour, Rashid Noori.</p>.<p>"The Taliban kill us, IS kill us and the Americans kill us," he said.</p>.<p>"Do they all think our children are terrorists?"</p>
<p>When Ezmarai Ahmadi returned home from work on Sunday evening in Kabul, the usual gaggle of squealing children were waiting to greet him -- his sons and daughters, and a slew of nieces and nephews.</p>.<p>He pulled his white sedan into the driveway of a modest house in Kwaja Burga, a densely populated neighbourhood in the northwest of the Afghan capital, and handed the keys to his eldest son to park.</p>.<p>Youngsters piled into the vehicle -- pretending the parking routine was an adventure -- while Ezmarai watched from the side.</p>.<p>Then out of the blue Afghan sky, a missile came screeching down -- striking the car with a terrible force and obliterating the lives of 10 people in an instant.</p>.<p>The United States said Sunday it had destroyed an explosive-laden vehicle in an air strike, thwarting a bid by the Islamic State to detonate a car bomb at Kabul airport.</p>.<p>On Monday, it looked as if they could have made a terrible mistake.</p>.<p>"The rocket came and hit the car full of kids inside our house," said Aimal Ahmadi, Ezmarai's brother.</p>.<p>"It killed all of them."</p>.<p>Aimal said 10 members of the family died in the air strike -- including his own daughter and five other children.</p>.<p>On Monday, when AFP visited the scene of the strike, Aimal was impatiently waiting for other relatives to arrive to help him organise burials for most of his family.</p>.<p>"My brother and his four children were killed. I lost my small daughter.. nephews and nieces," he said disconsolately.</p>.<p>"We are aware of reports of civilian casualties following our strike on a vehicle in Kabul," Captain Bill Urban, a US military spokesman, said in a statement.</p>.<p>The words rang hollow for Aimal, who can scarcely believe his brother could be mistaken for an Islamic State sympathiser, let alone an operative planning a deadly car bomb attack.</p>.<p>Ezmarai was an engineer working with a non-governmental organization -- an ordinary Afghan trying to make ends meet in a turbulent time.</p>.<p>US nerves have been frayed since an IS suicide bomber triggered a massive blast at an entrance to the airport on Thursday, as huge crowds clamoured to get inside in the hope of getting aboard an evacuation flight out of Afghanistan.</p>.<p>Nearly 100 Afghans were killed, and also 13 US service members -- just days before the last American soldier was due to withdraw from the country after a brutal 20-year war.</p>.<p>Against that backdrop, US intelligence had warned of another imminent attack, and on Sunday the US military said it had stopped one before it happened.</p>.<p>"We are still assessing the results of this strike, which we know disrupted an imminent ISIS-K threat to the airport," Urban said Sunday, using an acronym for the Afghan branch of the Islamic State group.</p>.<p>"We know that there were substantial and powerful subsequent explosions resulting from the destruction of the vehicle, indicating a large amount of explosive material inside that may have caused additional casualties," he continued.</p>.<p>"It is unclear what may have happened, and we are investigating further."</p>.<p>When locals heard the blast in the neighbourhood, they swiftly came to see what help they could offer.</p>.<p>"All the children were killed inside the car, the adults were killed just outside. The car was on fire -- we could hardly find body parts," said one, named Sabir.</p>.<p>"We would be deeply saddened by any potential loss of innocent life," the US spokesman said in the statement.</p>.<p>But the words rang hollow for another neighbour, Rashid Noori.</p>.<p>"The Taliban kill us, IS kill us and the Americans kill us," he said.</p>.<p>"Do they all think our children are terrorists?"</p>