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USA is finally out of Afghanistan

"It worked, it worked beautifully," one official said of the arrangement. As of Monday when the US completed its withdrawal, more than 122,000 people in total had been airlifted from Hamid Karzai International Airport since July and more than 6,000 Americans civilians evacuated. However, 13 Americans service members and more than 170 Afghans were killed in a suicide blast at the airport last week.

Yes.
But imagine a scenario: The Taliban pulling miles from the Kabul Airport, telling Americans that the Airport is under American control and that for Americans to use the existing Afghan forces, which were available in Kabul for protection, and just leave on their own.

It would have been a bloodbath and Americans, who had been threatening Taliban with mass reprisals in case of Taliban attack, would not have been able to do much in a city of 5+ million where hundreds of thousands would throng the streets and mob the airport. How many juicy targets ISIS-K would have then? This was not stirring some hornets nest--this was being INSIDE the hornets nest!! How many would have been able to evacuate? How many planes could even land, let alone fly out?

Joe Biden owes the Taliban a LOT for the cooperation extended to Joe! Otherwise, it would have been a catastrophe for his administration and indeed for American military, American citizens, and of course for Afghan civilians. And yet I see ingratitude and talk of 'sanctions'.
 
Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting Fawad Hussain Chaudhry has said that all US troops that have come to Pakistan as part of the evacuation efforts will leave the country sometime today (Tuesday), rejecting speculation that Islamabad has granted any kind of visas to the American army personnel leaving Afghanistan.

"155 troop members of the American forces have come to Pakistan from Afghanistan. Only 42 of them remain and the rest have already left," said Fawad, addressing a press conference in Islamabad after the cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Imran Khan.
 
The withdrawal came just before the end of an August 31 deadline set by President Joe Biden to call time on America's longest war -- one that ultimately claimed the lives of more than 2,400 US service members.

Members of Badri 313 military unit stand guard at Kabul's airport


Members of Badri 313 military unit stand guard at Kabul's airport


The early finish followed a threat from the regional offshoot of the Islamic State group, rivals of the Taliban, which was seeking to attack the US forces at the airport.

Taliban forces patrol at a runway a day after the U.S. troops withdrawal from Hamid Karzai international airport n Kabul


Taliban forces patrol at a runway a day after the U.S. troops withdrawal from Hamid Karzai international airport n Kabul


Thirteen US troops were among more than 100 people killed when an IS suicide bomber late last week attacked the perimeter of the airport, where desperate Afghans had massed in hope of getting on board an evacuation flight.

More than 123,000 people were evacuated from Kabul aboard the US-led airlift operation, which began just after the Taliban swept into the capital on August 14.
 
Let's see what America decides to actually do. The 'most of the world' argument @cloud4000 is heavily dependent on which direction America takes about Taliban. But this is not all about the optics of women's rights blah blah--America has been working with Saudi Arabia for decades very closely despite KSA being repressive society.
NY Times often has inside knowledge and this article is worth reading and pondering.



Aug. 31, 2021, 1:17 p.m. ET
Even as the United States finalizes its departure from Afghanistan, it faces a dilemma there as wrenching as any during the 20-year war: how to deal with the new Taliban government.
The question is already manifest in the debate over how deeply to cooperate against a mutual enemy, the Islamic State branch in the region, known as ISIS-K.

Another: Whether to release $9.4 billion in Afghan government currency reserves that are frozen in the United States. Handing the Taliban billions would mean funding the machinery of its ultraconservative rule. But withholding the money would all but ensure a sudden currency crisis and halt on imports, including food and fuel, starving Afghan civilians whom the United States had promised to protect.
These are only the beginning. Washington and the Taliban may spend years, even decades, pulled between cooperation and conflict, compromise and competition, as they manage a relationship in which neither can fully tolerate nor live without the other.


However fierce in battle, the Taliban seem to understand that governing an impoverished, war-ravaged nation is a very different challenge for which it needs economic and diplomatic support, both of which it is already seeking from the United States.

Washington, for its part, sees Afghanistan as a potential haven for international terrorists, a center of geopolitical competition against its greatest adversaries and the site of two looming catastrophes — Taliban rule and economic collapse — that could each ripple far beyond the country’s borders.

At home, President Biden already faces a backlash over Afghanistan that would be likely to intensify if he were seen as enabling Taliban rule. But he may find that securing even the most modest American aims in the country requires tolerating the group that now controls it.

His administration got a taste of this new reality last week, when American forces evacuating Kabul relied on Taliban fighters to help secure the city’s airport.

“It’s in their interest that we are able to leave on time,” President Biden said when asked about the risks, and perhaps indignities, of welcoming partial Taliban control over access to the evacuation.


He added, in a line that may come to define the relationship, “It’s not a matter of trust, it’s a matter of mutual self-interest.”

Mutual Enemies
If the United States, now without troops or allies in Afghanistan, wishes to contain ISIS-K, it will need on-the-ground intelligence and friendly forces.

And the Taliban, still straining to consolidate control over the country’s many remote corners, may need American air power to help defeat the group.

That combination was essential to beating the Islamic State in Iraq, officials who worked on the campaign have said. Washington and the Taliban are already testing quiet, mostly tacit coordination.

The United States has a long history of working with unsavory governments against terrorist groups.

But such governments have routinely exploited this to win American acquiescence, and even assistance, in suppressing domestic opponents they have labeled extremists.

This dynamic has long enabled dictators to disregard American demands on human rights and democracy, confident that Washington would tolerate their abuses as long as they delivered on terrorism matters.


Even if American officials could verify every target list, any airstrikes would be in service to a Taliban takeover it spent decades resisting. And each Taliban soldier spared from fighting ISIS-K could be redirected to suppressing less extreme opposition groups.

It may ultimately be a question of whether Washington prefers an Afghanistan divided by civil war — the very conditions that produced the Taliban and now ISIS-K — or one unified under the control of a Taliban that may or may not moderate itself in power.


A Diplomatic Dance
The Taliban, desperate for foreign support, have emphasized a desire to build ties with Washington.

The longer the United States holds out recognition, formal or informal, the more incentive the Taliban have to chase American approval. But if Washington waits too long, other powers may fill the diplomatic vacuum first.

Iran and China, which border Afghanistan, are both signaling that they may embrace the Taliban government in exchange for promises related mostly to terrorism. Both are eager to avoid an economic collapse or return to war on their borders. And they are especially eager to keep American influence from returning.

“Beijing will want to extend recognition to the Taliban government, likely after or at the same time that Pakistan does so but before any Western country does,” Amanda Hsiao, a China analyst for the International Crisis Group, wrote in a recent policy brief.

Iran has already begun referring to the “Islamic Emirate,” the Taliban’s preferred name for its government. Iranian missions remain open.


For Washington, there are gray areas between embracing or isolating the Taliban. Friendly countries with interests in Afghanistan, such as Turkey or Qatar, are already hinting at a desire to keep up or even deepen business interests in the country, for which they are likely to seek at least tacit American approval.

Washington did not recognize Vietnam’s government until 1995, 20 years after withdrawing. But the intervening years included a flurry of agreements. American concessions tended to strengthen Vietnamese pragmatists over hard-liners, bringing reciprocation.

Still, Vietnam remains a single-party dictatorship that has only very slowly and slightly eased. But the former enemies have drawn much closer over one issue that is not likely to apply in Afghanistan, extensive trade, and another that is — opposition to China.

Many Afghans fear that American recognition, even indirect, could be taken as a blank check for the group to rule however it wants.

Still, some who are fiercely opposed to both the Taliban and the American withdrawal have urged international engagement.

“Everyone with a stake in the stability of Afghanistan needs to come together,” Saad Mohseni, an Afghan-Australian businessmen behind much of the country’s media sector, wrote in a Financial Times essay.

Rather than undermine the Taliban government, he urged, foreign powers including the United States “must leverage this need for recognition and persuade the Taliban to adopt a more accommodating stance.”


Neither engagement nor hostility is likely to transform the group’s underlying nature. And even when engagement works, it can be slow and frustrating, with many breakdowns and reversals on a road to rapprochement that might take decades to travel.

The Other Looming Catastrophe
Perhaps the only scenario as dire as a Taliban takeover is one that is all but assured without American intervention: economic collapse, even famine.

Afghanistan imports much of its food and fuel, and most of its electricity. Because it runs a deep trade deficit, it pays for imports mostly through foreign aid, which amounts to nearly half of the country’s economy — and has now been suspended.

The country holds enough currency reserves to finance about 18 months of imports. Or it did, until the U.S. froze the accounts.

As a result, Afghanistan may soon run out food and fuel with no way to replenish either.

“Acute famines generally result from shortages of food triggering a scramble for necessities, speculation and spikes in food prices, which kill the poorest,” a Columbia University economist, Adam Tooze, wrote last week. “Those are the elements we can already see at work in Afghanistan.”

As the United States learned in 1990s Somalia, flying in food does not solve the problem and may even worsen it by putting local farmers out of business.

Mr. Tooze warned of what economists call a “sudden stop,” in which countries suddenly lose the ability to finance their trade deficit. This can also trigger a currency crisis, leading to runaway inflation that makes whatever food is left all but unaffordable.


n the northern Afghan city of Kunduz, flour prices have already risen by 41 percent and gas prices by 63 percent, according to Save the Children, a charity. The group also surveyed some of the thousands of families displaced from rural areas to Kabul and found that many already lack the means to buy food.

Political Costs
It is difficult to imagine a harder sell in Washington than offering diplomatic outreach and billions of dollars to the group that once harbored Al Qaeda, barred women from public life and staged public executions.

Republicans are already seizing on the chaos of the withdrawal to criticize Mr. Biden as soft on adversaries abroad.

He may also face pressure from Afghan émigrés, a number of whom already live in the United States. Diasporas, like those from Vietnam or Cuba, tend to be vocally hawkish toward the governments they fled.

The administration, which is pursuing an ambitious domestic agenda in a narrowly divided Congress, may be hesitant to divert more political capital to a country that it sees as peripheral.

Still, Mr. Biden has seemed to relish rejecting political pressure on Afghanistan. Whether he chooses to privilege geopolitical rivalry, humanitarian welfare or counterterrorism in Afghanistan, he may find himself doing so again.
 
US Central Command head Gen Kenneth McKenzie said it had all been rendered impossible to use.
"Those aircraft will never fly again," he said.
The aircraft abandoned in Kabul include:
  • MD-530 helicopters, used for reconnaissance and close attack
  • A-29 light attack planes
In June, the Afghan armed forces were using:
  • 43 MD-530s, provided by the US
  • 23 A-29s
Establishing the cost of individual items of equipment is not straightforward - but the unit cost of an A-29 has been quoted as more than $10m (£7.3m).

1630433896609.png


An A-29 surrounded by abandoned kit

A video shot by LA Times correspondent Nabih Bulos shows Taliban fighters with a CH-46 Sea Knight transport helicopter.




The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
Used by the US State Department to evacuate staff from the embassy in Kabul, seven Sea Knights have reportedly been rendered inoperable and left behind.


1630433959919.png


A Taliban fighter photographs an MD-530

At least one C-130 Hercules transport plane was also pictured on the tarmac.


1630433811064.png


A C-130 at Hamid Karzai International Airport


According to Gen McKenzie, 70 mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles (MRAPs) were also abandoned, after being disabled.

The cost of a single MRAP has been quoted as $500,000-$1m.

Also left behind in Kabul were:
  • 27 Humvee all-terrain military vehicles
  • an unspecified quantity of counter-rocket and artillery defence systems equipment
In some cases explosives were used to render equipment impossible to use.
 
Airport uncertainty

All eyes will now turn to how the Taliban handles its first few days with sole authority over the country, with a sharp focus on whether it will allow other foreigners and Afghans to leave the country.

Blinken said a small number of US citizens remained in the country -- "under 200" but likely closer to just 100 -- and wanted to leave.

Many thousands of other Afghans who had worked with the US-backed government and fear retribution also want to get out.

Western allies have voiced heartbreak in recent days that not all Afghans who wanted to flee could get on the evacuation flights.

The UN Security Council adopted a resolution Monday, requiring the Taliban to honour a commitment to let people freely leave Afghanistan in the days ahead, and to grant access to the UN and other aid agencies.

But they did not agree to call for the creation of a "safe zone" in Kabul, as envisaged by French President Emmanual Macron.

Talks are ongoing as to who will now run Kabul airport.

The Taliban have asked Turkey to handle logistics while they maintain control of security, but President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has not yet accepted that offer.

It was not immediately clear which airlines would agree to fly in and out of Kabul.
 
. Until the last general


by The Frontier Post


FRONT-PG-PIC-1-1-1.jpg



The United States and its allies began the war in Afghanistan on October 7, 2001, and ended on August 30, 2021. About 800,000 Americans have gone through the conflict. Soviet troops were in the country from December 25, 1979 to February 15, 1989. 620 thousand Soviet servicemen took part in the war. In both cases, according to official versions, the last to leave Afghanistan were high-ranking generals – Chris Donahue and Boris Gromov.

The photo shows Major General Chris Donahue boarding a Boeing C-17 military transport aircraft at Kabul airport on the evening of August 30, 2021.

The general turned 52 in August; he celebrated his birthday in Afghanistan. Since 2020, he has been in command of the 82nd Division of the 18th Airborne Corps of the US Army.

He previously served in command positions in South Korea, Panama and the United States. Before Afghanistan, he also fought in Iraq and Syria.



FRONT-PG-PIC-2-1-2.jpg



The historical snapshot was posted on Twitter by the Pentagon. “It was an incredibly difficult, intense mission, filled with many complexities, with constant threats. Our troops have shown restraint, discipline and sympathy, ”reads the message of the 18th Army Corps.

Another photograph was taken on February 15, 1989. Lieutenant General Boris Gromov is met by his son Maxim on the Friendship Bridge on the border of Afghanistan and the USSR. At that time, the general was 45 years old, he served in Afghanistan in 1980-1982 and 1987-1989.

During the second trip, he commanded the 40th Army and at the same time was the plenipotentiary of the USSR government for the temporary stay of troops in Afghanistan. In 1989, he led the withdrawal of troops, developed a plan of withdrawal through the Salang pass, which passed without loss.


In an interview on the bridge, he made his famous speech:

“There is not a single Soviet soldier, officer, or ensign behind me. This was the end of the nine-year stay…Our soldiers, who have passed these nine years, need to erect monuments”. Kommersant.
 
Joe Biden speech

On Tuesday afternoon, Joe Biden tried to “turn the page” from a month of chaos and death in Afghanistan and, more broadly, from 20 years of ultimately futile US attempts at occupation and nation-building.

He spoke of the “extraordinary success” of the US evacuation mission over the past few weeks, with more than a hundred thousand Americans and Afghans airlifted out under extreme duress.

At times he seemed defensive, noting that Americans were warned 19 times to exit Afghanistan before the August US military withdrawal. He accused Afghan leaders, allies on whom the US had depended, of “corruption and malfeasance”. And he blamed the Trump administration for negotiating what he characterised as an inadequate withdrawal agreement with the Taliban.

He spent less time talking about the failures – of the 13 US soldiers who lost their lives last week and the hundreds of civilian casualties. Instead, he spoke of the cost of the so-called “forever war” – of thousands of US military casualties, tens of thousands of injuries and trillions of dollars spent in an effort that began and ended with Taliban in control.

He said the US had no vital interest in Afghanistan, and that the mission there – to eradicate Al-Qaeda and prevent future terror attacks – was accomplished a decade ago.

“It was time to end this war,” he said. He then tried to reframe US foreign policy as depending less on military deployments and more on diplomacy and international cooperation to face adversaries like China and Russia.

Public opinion polls show Americans still support the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, although many are unhappy with how Biden oversaw the exit. White House officials say they hope, as time passes, that the nation will be grateful for what the president accomplished and forget the details of how it ended.
 
Biden did not want to 'extend a forever exit'

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The US has "leverage" to make sure commitments made by the Taliban are met, says Biden.

He goes on to say the 31 August withdrawal was not an "arbitrary deadline" but was to save lives.

If the US stayed, despite the previous administration promising to leave, then "all bets were off", he said.
The choice he faced was between leaving, or the situation escalating.

He was not going to "extend this forever war" - and was not going to continue with a forever exit.
 

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A great speech from the President! It's the time for the USA to return to the "roots"!!! The US founding fathers wanted her to be "a shining city on the hills for the folks created by their CREATOR", not to remain engaged in the Imperial "forever wars", and that too for the sake of the Kabuli pedophile corrupt-to-the-core thugs in service of the Hindutva terrorist/rapist scums and maggots of the hell....
 

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