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Russia-Ukraine Warfare: U.S. Will Give $2 Billion Extra Assist, Blinken Says

Recognition…Doug Mills/The New York Times

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, during a visit to Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, on Thursday said he would inform Congress that the United States intends to send an additional $2 billion in long-term military assistance to Ukraine and 18 other countries. who are at risk of a Russian invasion.

Separately, President Biden has approved an additional $675 million in military assistance to Ukraine, Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III said.

The combined aid totals $13.5 billion in Biden administration aid to Ukraine since the Russian invasion in February.

Mr. Blinken’s visit to Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs was his second since the start of the Russian invasion. The State Department has not publicly announced his trip in advance for security reasons.

His visit comes as Mr. Austin meets with allied defense ministers at a monthly meeting of the Ukraine Contact Group, which aims to coordinate the flow of military aid to Ukraine. The arrival of Western equipment, particularly longer-range HIMARS missile systems, has enabled Ukrainian forces to attack Russian military infrastructure behind front lines and aided a counteroffensive in the south — although some military experts argue aid to date is insufficient to avert this War decided in favor of Ukraine.

“Ukrainian forces have begun their counter-offensive in the south of their country and they are integrating the capabilities that we have all deployed to help themselves fight and retake their sovereign territory,” Mr Austin said at the start of the meeting at Ramstein Air Force Base in Germany.

“This contact group must position itself to provide long-term support to the brave defenders of Ukraine,” he said. “That now means the continuous and determined flow of skills.”

Russian forces are struggling to seize new territory but show no signs of retreating from the invasion, which US estimates have left tens of thousands of casualties on both sides and left vast areas of eastern and southern Ukraine in ruins. On Wednesday, President Vladimir V Putin delivered a defiant address, whitewashing the enormous toll of the war and the faltering performance of his army, and proclaimed at an economic conference in Russia’s Far East: “We have lost nothing and will lose nothing.”

In Germany, Mr Austin said the new weapons package included air-launched HARM missiles designed to seek out and destroy Russian air defense radar; guided multiple launch rocket systems, known as GMLRS; howitzers and other artillery; armored ambulances; and small arms.

The State Department said the $2 billion package, which will be drawn from pools of funds already approved by Congress but whose specific allocation requires Congress approval, would be split roughly half between Ukraine and 18 other nations. These are Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Georgia, Greece, Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia.

The money will be used to “build the current and future capabilities” of the armed forces of Ukraine and other countries, including by strengthening their cyber and hybrid warfare capabilities, particularly to counter Russian aggression, the State Department said.

The money will also help integrate non-NATO members into the alliances’ armed forces.

On Thursday afternoon, Mr Blinken met with Ukraine’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dmytro Kuleba. He previously visited the US embassy and a children’s hospital that treats children injured in Russian attacks.

Mr Blinken was also introduced to Patron at the hospital, a Jack Russell terrier who Ukrainian forces have credited with helping excavate hundreds of Russian landmines. Mr. Blinken declared the dog “world famous”.

Michael Croley and

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Newest Russia-Ukraine Battle Information: Reside Updates

Recognition…Eleonore Dermy/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

He wrote a book describing a Russian military that was so ill-prepared when invading Ukraine that he didn’t know until he did that his unit had entered the country Awoke to artillery fire.

Now 34-year-old Pavel Filatiev, who says he is a paratrooper in the Russian military, is seeking political asylum in France after arriving there last weekend. He was hailed as a hero by some in the West, his book embraced by Kremlin opponents as evidence of what he called a “terrible war”.

But Mr. Filatiev remains a scourge and a traitor in his native Russia, at least among pro-war advocates who know of its existence, as opponents of the invasion are aggressively censored. Some critics also say his book ignores the strong support for President Vladimir V. Putin and the war among many Russians and Russian soldiers. And some Ukrainians and Russian opponents of the war say he is an unreliable narrator and an accomplice to the violence.

The book has attracted a great deal of attention, partly because of the rarity of a Russian soldier speaking about his experiences. Mr. Filatiev’s account of his time in Ukraine has not been independently verified by the New York Times. Kamalia Mehtiyeva, his lawyer, said he awaits a decision in the coming days on whether he can remain in France as a refugee.

“He fears persecution by the Russian Federation,” she said by phone from Paris.

According to his book, Mr. Filatiev spent about two months as a paratrooper stationed in the southern Ukrainian cities of Kherson and Mykolaiv and contracted an eye infection in a ditch. He then tried to leave the army after being taken to a military hospital in Sevastopol for health reasons. But he writes that he was threatened with prosecution if he didn’t return.

He fled Russia in August after publishing his book ZOV, which refers to the symbols painted on Russian military vehicles, and fled to France via Tunisia.

“We had no moral right to attack another country, especially the people closest to us,” he writes in the book, which he himself published on VKontakte, a Russian social media network, in August. “We have begun a terrible war,” he writes, “a war in which cities are being destroyed and which is resulting in the deaths of children, women and the elderly.”

“ZOV” describes a chaotic Russian army in which demoralized recruits were outfitted with rusty weapons and ill-fitting uniforms. On February 24, the day the invasion began, Mr. Filatiev writes that he and other soldiers were shocked to learn they were invading Ukraine.

“I woke up around 2am,” he writes. “The column was somewhere in the wilderness, and everyone had turned off their engines and headlights,” he continues. “I couldn’t understand: are we shooting at advancing Ukrainians? Or maybe at NATO? Or do we attack? Who is this infernal shelling aimed at?”

He later characterizes the Russian army as lacking in basic services. During a military operation in occupied Kherson in March, he writes, desperate Russian soldiers searched buildings for food, water, showers and a place to sleep and looted everything they could find of value, including computers and clothing.

Mr Filatiev’s report was widely reported by independent Russian media, most of which were based outside the country. But state media have conspicuously ignored him. And even some Ukrainians on social media have resisted attempts to glorify or praise him for fighting in Ukraine.

Ivan Zhdanov, a Russian opposition figure and ally of jailed dissident Aleksei A. Navalny, said Mr Filatiev had blood on his hands.

“Honestly, I’m skeptical about his decision because he went there and fought there,” he said on his show on YouTube.

In an interview with the Agence France-Presse news agency, Mr Filatiev said he believes he has a moral imperative to say what is happening in Ukraine.

“I want people in Russia and in the world to know how this war came about,” he told the news agency.

Constant Méheut contributed the coverage from Paris.

And Bilefsky and

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U.S. relationship with Taliban unclear after finish of warfare

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley attend a news conference at the Pentagon on July 21, 2021 in Arlington, Virginia.

Alex Wong | Getty Images News | Getty Images

WASHINGTON – Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Wednesday it was not yet clear what kind of relationship the Pentagon would have with the Taliban in Afghanistan after Western forces fought the militant Islamist group for 20 years.

“It’s hard to predict where this will go in the future with regard to the Taliban,” Austin told reporters at the Pentagon when asked about the next steps following the full withdrawal of the US military from the country on Monday.

“We don’t know what the future of the Taliban looks like,” said General Mark Milley, chairman of the US Army General Staff.

“I can tell you from personal experience that this is a ruthless group from the past and whether it changes or not,” Milley said, adding that he and Austin both fought the group during their military careers.

Taliban troops patrol near the entrance gate of Hamid Karzai International Airport one day after the withdrawal of US troops in Kabul, Afghanistan, on August 31, 2021.

Stringer | Reuters

“And as for our dealings with them at this airfield or for the last year or so in the war, do what you have to do to reduce the risk to the Mission and the armed forces, not what you absolutely want to do,” said Milley on the question of the coordination between the US and the Taliban in the last few days of a huge humanitarian evacuation mission.

The US coordinated with the Taliban during the final days of the war to ensure safe passage for US citizens and Afghan nationals to Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul for evacuation. However, there were reports that, contrary to their public statements, the Islamist militants prevented some Afghans from reaching the airport.

When asked at the State Department whether the US would recognize the Taliban as a legitimate government, State Secretary for Political Affairs Victoria Nuland said it was premature to say so.

“Our relationship with the Taliban is guided by what they do, not what they say,” Nuland began. “But there are some pressing questions, like the humanitarian situation of the people in Afghanistan. So let’s look at things like that, ”she added.

“But we haven’t made any decisions about the rest and we certainly won’t unless we see the expected behaviors,” said Nuland.

Taliban fighters patrolled the streets of Kabul in a vehicle on August 23, 2021, while the Taliban imposed a sense of calm in the capital in a city marked by violent crime by patrolling the streets and manning checkpoints.

Deputy Kohsar | AFP | Getty Images

Statements from the highest levels of Defense and State Department come a day after President Joe Biden defiantly defended his decision to withdraw US forces from Afghanistan.

“When I ran for president, I made a commitment to end this war, and today I kept that commitment. It was time to be honest with the American people; we no longer had a clear goal in an indefinite mission. “In Afghanistan,” said Biden from the White House on Tuesday.

“This decision on Afghanistan is not just about Afghanistan, it is about ending an era of major military operations to transform other countries,” added the president.

With its troops gone, the US must rely on diplomatic engagement with the Taliban to ensure that the remaining Americans and Afghans working for the US can safely leave Afghanistan

Biden said in his address on Tuesday that “90% of Americans in Afghanistan who wanted to leave could leave.” According to the State Department, fewer than 200 Americans remain in the country.

The president said the US would hold the Taliban responsible for guaranteeing safe passage to anyone who still wants to get out of Afghanistan.

The US and NATO launched their military campaign in Afghanistan in October 2001, weeks after the September 11, 2001 attacks. The Taliban then offered refuge to al-Qaeda, the terrorist group that planned and carried out the devastating attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Around 2,500 US soldiers were killed in the conflict, which also killed more than 100,000 Afghan soldiers, police officers and civilians. The wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria have cost US taxpayers more than $ 1.57 trillion since September 11, 2001, according to a Department of Defense report.

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Biden addresses finish of the U.S. conflict in Afghanistan

U.S. President Joe Biden gives a speech at the Rehoboth Beach Convention Center in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, United States, on Jan.

Kevin Lemarque | Reuters

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden will address the U.S. public on Tuesday to mark the end of America’s long war in Afghanistan after the military completed an evacuation mission that brought tens of thousands of people to safety from the Taliban, albeit deadly were when terrorists killed several US soldiers and many Afghan civilians.

Biden’s speech, scheduled for 2:45 p.m. ET, will take place just 11 days before the 20th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks that sparked the US intervention in Afghanistan.

On Monday at 3:29 p.m. ET, one minute before midnight, the last C-17 cargo plane carrying US forces left Afghanistan in Kabul, effectively ending America’s 20-year military campaign in the country.

The Taliban, which was ousted by the US shortly after the 9/11 attacks, now control almost the entire country.

The withdrawal of US forces came after a whopping 17-day humanitarian evacuation of 123,000 people desperate to flee Taliban rule. Of the total evacuees flown from Kabul, 6,000 were US citizens.

Marine Corps General Frank McKenzie, the four-star commander of U.S. Central Command, said there had not been any Americans on board the last five flights from Kabul.

“We couldn’t get Americans out, this operation probably ended about 12 hours before we moved out. We’ll continue the operations and would have been ready to get them until the last minute, but none of them made it to the airport,” said McKenzie on Monday via video conference call in Qatar.

McKenzie, who oversees the U.S. military mission in the area, added that there were no evacuees at the airfield when the last C-17 took off. All US soldiers and Afghan troops who helped defend the airport were also blown from the air along with their families on Monday, the general said.

Foreign Secretary Antony Blinken said in a speech on Monday evening that fewer than 200 Americans are still seeking evacuation.

“Our commitment to you and all Americans in Afghanistan and around the world continues. The protection and well-being of Americans abroad remains the most important and long-lasting mission of the State Department,” said the country’s top diplomat on Monday.

“A new chapter of American engagement in Afghanistan has begun. It is one in which we will lead with our diplomacy. The military mission has ended. A new diplomatic mission has begun,” said Blinken.

Blinken added that the US has suspended its diplomatic presence in Kabul and will move those operations to Doha, Qatar.

“Time to End America’s Longest War”

U.S. Marines from 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, RCT 2nd Battalion 8th Marines Echo Co. take cover when a 500 pound bomb explodes on a site after the Marines hosted two days on July 3, 2009 in Main Poshteh, Afghanistan Have taken fire out of position.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images News | Getty Images

During an April speech at the White House, Biden called for US combat troops to be withdrawn from Afghanistan by September 11th.

The removal of approximately 3,000 American soldiers coincides with the 20th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks that sparked America’s entry into long wars in the Middle East and Central Asia.

“It is time to end America’s longest war. It is time for the American troops to come home, ”Biden said in his televised address in April from the Treaty Room of the White House, where former President George W. Bush announced military action against al-Qaeda and the Taliban in October 2001.

“I am now the fourth American president to head an American troop presence in Afghanistan. Two Republicans. Two Democrats. I will not hand this responsibility over to a fifth,” said Biden, adding that the US mission will be solely devoted to providing assistance would go to Afghanistan and in support of diplomacy.

During his address, the president cited the military service of his own son – Beau Biden, who served in Iraq for a year and later died of cancer in 2015. He is the first president in 40 years to have a child serve in the US military and in a war zone.

The president said the US achieved its goals a decade ago when it killed Osama bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda – the terrorist group that started the 9/11 attacks. Since then, the US’s reasons for staying in Afghanistan have become unclear as the terrorist threat has spread across the globe, Biden said.

“Given the terrorist threat that now rises in many places, it makes little sense to me and our leaders to deploy and concentrate thousands of troops in just one country, which costs billions each year,” said Biden. “We cannot continue the cycle of expanding or expanding our military presence in Afghanistan in order to create ideal conditions for withdrawal and expect a different outcome.”

U.S. Marines from Charlie 1/1 of the 15th MEU (Marine Expeditionary Unit) fill sandbags around their light mortar position at the front of a U.S. Marine Corps base, near a cardboard sign reminding everyone that Taliban forces are everywhere and anywhere in the south could be Afghanistan December 1st, 2001.

Jim Hollander | Reuters

Biden added that his decision to withdraw from Afghanistan was coordinated with allies and coalition partners.

NATO secretary Jens Stoltenberg said from the headquarters of the alliance in Brussels that the withdrawal would be “orderly, coordinated and deliberate.”

“We went to Afghanistan together, we adjusted our stance together and we all agree that we should leave together,” said Stoltenberg.

The NATO mission in Afghanistan was launched after the alliance left after the 9/11 attacks.

The US and NATO launched their military campaign in the center of Afghanistan and the Pentagon in October 2001, weeks after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

Since then, around 2,500 US soldiers have died in the conflict, which also killed more than 100,000 Afghan soldiers, police officers and civilians. The wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria have cost US taxpayers more than $ 1.57 trillion since September 11, 2001, according to a Department of Defense report.

Now the Taliban are back in power.

Breathtaking Taliban advances

Taliban fighters sit over a vehicle on a street in Laghman province on August 15, 2021.

AFP | Getty Images

Shortly after his April address, Biden updated the schedule for the Pentagon’s massive task of removing soldiers and equipment from Afghanistan for August 31.

As the US and coalition forces accelerated their retreat, the Taliban made rapid strides on the battlefield, despite being vastly outnumbered by the Afghan military. In one weekend, the Taliban quickly captured five provincial capitals in Afghanistan, three in one day alone.

The Taliban occupied Bagram Air Force Base on August 15, a development that came less than two months after the US military handed over the once steadfast air base to the Afghan National Security and Defense Force.

In 2012, at its peak, Bagram looked through more than 100,000 U.S. soldiers. It was the largest US military facility in Afghanistan.

As the Taliban approached the capital, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani fled the country and western nations rushed to evacuate embassies amid a deteriorating security situation.

On August 15, the Taliban invaded Kabul and captured the presidential palace, marking the collapse of the US-NATO-backed Afghan government.

After the Taliban came to power, Biden defended his decision to withdraw US forces.

“I stand completely behind my decision. After 20 years I have learned the hard way that there was never a good time to withdraw the US armed forces,” Biden told the Taliban one day after the fall of Afghanistan.

“American troops cannot and should not fight in a war and die in a war that the Afghan armed forces are unwilling to wage for themselves,” Biden said. “We gave them every chance to determine their own future. We couldn’t give them the will to fight for that future,” he added.

Biden ordered thousands of US soldiers to be sent to Kabul to help evacuate US embassy personnel and secure the perimeter of Hamid Karzai International Airport.

Thousands of Afghans rushed to the airport tarmac to flee Taliban rule.

Western forces carried out an immense humanitarian evacuation mission of Afghan nationals and civilians from third countries, a logistical masterpiece that spanned the globe and was pushed to its limits with looming security threats.

On August 26, an ISIS-affiliated suicide bomber detonated an explosive outside the gates of the airport, killing 13 US soldiers and more than 100 Afghans.

The last US casualties

U.S. Soldiers assigned to Joint Task Force-Crisis Response are pallbearers for soldiers killed in operations at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Aug. 27. US soldiers support the State Department in a non-combatant evacuation in Afghanistan.

1st Lt. Mark Andries | U.S. Marine Corps photo

The Pentagon on Saturday released the names of the 13 US soldiers who were killed in the suicide attack on Kabul airport. The attack, which is being investigated, killed 11 Marines, one Marine and one Army soldier.

On Sunday, the President and First Lady Jill Biden traveled to Dover Air Force Base to meet privately with the families of the fallen before watching the graceful handover of American flag-draped coffins from a C-17 military cargo plane to a vehicle .

A dignified transfer is a solemn process in which the remains of fallen soldiers are transported from an airplane to a waiting vehicle. It is carried out for every U.S. soldier killed in action.

The ceremony marked the first time Biden had participated in a worthy transfer since taking office.

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley also attended the dignified transfer, along with chiefs of service for the US Marine Corps, the Army and the Navy.

The remains of the soldiers were flown from Kabul to Kuwait and then to Germany before arriving in Dover.

The fallen include:

Marine Corps Staff Sgt.Din T. Hoover, 31, from Salt Lake City, Utah

Marine Corps Sgt.Johanny Rosariopichardo, 25, from Lawrence, Massachusetts

Marine Corps Sgt. Nicole L. Gee, 23, from Sacramento, California

Marine Corps Cpl. Hunter Lopez, 22, from Indio, California

Marine Corps Cpl. Daegan W. Page, 23, of Omaha, Nebraska

Marine Corps Cpl. Humberto A. Sanchez, 22, of Logansport, Indiana

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. David L. Espinoza, 20, from Rio Bravo, Texas

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Jared M. Schmitz, 20, from St. Charles, Missouri

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Rylee J. McCollum, 20, of Jackson, Wyoming

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Dylan R. Merola, 20, from Rancho Cucamonga, California

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Kareem M. Nikoui, 20, of Norco, California

Navy Hospitalman Maxton W. Soviak, 22, from Berlin Heights, Ohio

Army Staff Sgt. Ryan C. Knauss, 23, of Corryton, Tennessee

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America ends its longest battle, finishes Kabul withdrawal

A handout photo of a C-17 Globemaster III aircraft at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul.

Handout | Getty Images News

WASHINGTON – America’s longest war is over.

The United States has ended its withdrawal efforts from the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, the Pentagon announced on Monday, effectively ending a two-decade conflict that began not long after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

Following the Pentagon’s announcement, President Joe Biden thanked the American military in a statement Monday evening and said he would speak to the nation on Tuesday afternoon about his decision not to extend the U.S. mission in Afghanistan beyond August 31.

“In the past 17 days, our forces conducted the largest airlift in US history, evacuating over 120,000 US citizens, citizens of our allies and Afghan allies of the United States,” the president said in the statement.

“They did it with unmatched courage, professionalism and determination. Now our 20-year military presence in Afghanistan has come to an end.”

In the last week of the withdrawal, ISIS-K terrorists killed 13 US soldiers and dozens of Afghans in an attack outside the airport. US forces hit back and launched strikes to thwart other attacks.

The last C-17 military cargo aircraft left Hamid Karzai International Airport on Monday afternoon Eastern Time, according to U.S. Marine Corps General Kenneth McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command, last two weeks.

McKenzie, who oversees US military operations in the region, said the Taliban had no direct knowledge of the timing of the US military’s departure, adding that local commanders “have chosen to keep this information very limited” .

“But they were very helpful and useful to us when we shut down,” McKenzie said of the Taliban.

McKenzie said there were no Americans on the last five flights from Kabul.

“We couldn’t get any Americans out, this operation probably ended about 12 hours before we moved out. We’ll continue the operations and would have been ready to get them until the last minute, but none of them made it to the airport,” said McKenzie .

The four-star general added that there were no more evacuees at the airfield when the last C-17 took off and confirmed that all US soldiers and troops of the Afghan armed forces and their families were also flown out of the air on Monday.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said later Monday that fewer than 200 Americans are still seeking evacuation.

“Our commitment to you and all Americans in Afghanistan and around the world continues. The protection and well-being of Americans abroad remains the most important and long-lasting mission of the State Department,” said the country’s top diplomat in an evening address.

Early Monday, US and Allied forces evacuated 1,200 people from the Afghan capital on 26 military cargo plane flights in 24 hours, according to the latest White House figures.

About 122,800 people have been evacuated since the end of July, including about 6,000 U.S. citizens and their families.

“A new chapter of American engagement in Afghanistan has begun. It is one in which we will lead with our diplomacy. The military mission has ended. A new diplomatic mission has begun,” said Blinken.

Blinken added that the US has suspended its diplomatic presence in Kabul and will move those operations to Doha, Qatar.

“We will remain vigilant in monitoring threats ourselves and maintain robust counter-terrorism capabilities in the region to neutralize those threats if necessary – as we have done in recent days through striking ISIS brokers and even threats in Afghanistan and locations around the world.” Environment have demonstrated the world in which we have no armed forces on the ground, “said Blinken.

The Taliban are returning to power

Taliban fighters patrol the Wazir Akbar Khan district in the city of Kabul, Afghanistan on Wednesday, August 18, 2021.

Rahmat Gül | AP

The US began its war in Afghanistan in October 2001, weeks after the 9/11 attacks. Back then, the Taliban offered refuge to al-Qaeda, the group that launched the devastating terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Since then, around 2,500 US soldiers have died in the conflict, which also killed more than 100,000 Afghan soldiers, police officers and civilians.

Now the Taliban are back in power.

In the final weeks of a planned exodus of foreign troops from Afghanistan, the Taliban achieved a number of shocking successes on the battlefield.

The Taliban occupied Bagram Air Base, a sprawling and once staunch US military facility, less than two months after US commanders handed it over to the Afghan National Security and Defense Force.

In 2012, at its peak, Bagram looked through more than 100,000 U.S. soldiers. It was the largest US military facility in Afghanistan.

As the Taliban approached the capital, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani fled the country and western nations rushed to evacuate embassies amid deteriorating security conditions.

Biden ordered thousands of US soldiers to be sent to Kabul to help evacuate US embassy staff and secure the airport.

Meanwhile, thousands of Afghans swarmed over the airport tarmac to flee Taliban rule.

Although the Afghan military, long supported by US and NATO coalition forces, is vastly outnumbered, the Taliban captured the presidential palace in Kabul on August 15.

In April, Biden ordered the full withdrawal of about 3,000 US troops from Afghanistan by September 11th. He later announced an updated schedule that said the U.S. military mission in Afghanistan would end by August 31.

After the Taliban takeover, Biden defended his decision that the US would leave the war-torn country.

“I am fully behind my decision. After 20 years I have learned the hard way that there was never a good time to withdraw the US armed forces,” said Biden a day after the Taliban collapsed Afghanistan.

“American troops cannot and should not fight in a war and die in a war that the Afghan armed forces are unwilling to wage for themselves,” Biden said. “We gave them every chance to determine their own future. We couldn’t give them the will to fight for that future,” he added.

Last US casualties in the war in Afghanistan

In this U.S. Air Force image, flag-draped transfer cases line the interior of a transport aircraft prior to a graceful transfer at Dover Air Force Base, Del. The fallen soldiers were killed while assisting evacuations in Kabul, Afghanistan.

Jason Minto | US Air Force

The Pentagon on Saturday released the names of the 13 US soldiers killed after a suicide bomber detonated an explosive near the gates of Kabul airport.

The August 26 attack that killed 11 Marines, one Marine and one Army soldier is currently under investigation.

On Sunday, the President and First Lady Jill Biden traveled to Dover Air Force Base to meet privately with the families of the fallen before watching the graceful handover of American flag-draped coffins from a C-17 military cargo plane to a vehicle .

A dignified transfer is a solemn process in which the remains of fallen soldiers are transported from an airplane to a waiting vehicle. It is carried out for every U.S. soldier killed in action.

The remains of the soldiers were flown from Kabul to Kuwait and then to Germany before arriving in Dover.

On Sunday, Biden took part in a dignified transfer for the first time since taking office.

United States President Joe Biden will attend the dignified transfer of the remains of a fallen soldier at Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Delaware on August 29, 2021

Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley also attended the dignified transfer, along with U.S. Marine Corps Commander Gen. David Berger, U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. James McConville, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Michael Gilday and US Air Force Col. Chip Hollinger, who oversaw the military logistics of the transfer.

The fallen include:

Marine Corps Staff Sgt.Din T. Hoover, 31, from Salt Lake City, Utah

Marine Corps Sgt.Johanny Rosariopichardo, 25, from Lawrence, Massachusetts

Marine Corps Sgt. Nicole L. Gee, 23, from Sacramento, California

Marine Corps Cpl. Hunter Lopez, 22, from Indio, California

Marine Corps Cpl. Daegan W. Page, 23, of Omaha, Nebraska

Marine Corps Cpl. Humberto A. Sanchez, 22, of Logansport, Indiana

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. David L. Espinoza, 20, from Rio Bravo, Texas

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Jared M. Schmitz, 20, from St. Charles, Missouri

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Rylee J. McCollum, 20, of Jackson, Wyoming

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Dylan R. Merola, 20, from Rancho Cucamonga, California

Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Kareem M. Nikoui, 20, of Norco, California

Navy Hospitalman Maxton W. Soviak, 22, from Berlin Heights, Ohio

Army Staff Sgt. Ryan C. Knauss, 23, of Corryton, Tennessee.

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Afghanistan conflict will unfold past borders as Taliban advances: negotiator

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Taliban’s blitz of Afghan territory expanded on Wednesday, with the insurgents asserting control over nine of the country’s 34 provincial capitals.

Afghan and U.S. officials have warned of catastrophic violence in the war-torn country of 39 million as the deadline approaches for all U.S. troops to withdraw by the end of August.

Nader Nadery, a senior member of the Afghan Peace Negotiation Team, expressed grave concern over the rapidly worsening situation while speaking to CNBC on Wednesday.

“If the Taliban advances militarily, the region will be burned. This war will not be contained within the borders of Afghanistan,” Nadery told CNBC’s Capital Connection.

Asked what he saw as the most immediate danger to the international community, Nadery, who lived through decades of turmoil in Afghanistan, described a potential swell in terrorist activity far beyond the country fueled by a sense of victory over Western forces.

The fear is of “a consolidation of power of all the terrorist groups [under] the umbrella of Taliban and the space that the Taliban is providing for them,” Nadery said.

“The slogan now of every single terrorist group with the jihadist mind is ‘now that we have defeated the United States and its 42 allies in Afghanistan, we can go after them anywhere’,” Nadery added. “That slogan is a clear danger that will enable groups like the Daesh (ISIS), Al Qaeda and others to rally more people, because they’re on the march, they feel triumphant.”

“Members of the Taliban told us in our face that they have defeated the United States and the NATO allies,” he continued. “And that’s not going to be an easy slogan for them to give up, it will be a danger to any disenchanted young in the region and in a broader global arena, where they will join forces around that slogan, and this is not an easy danger.”

International terrorism spawning from a war-torn state is all too familiar. Al Qaeda grew in the 1990s as the group was provided a haven by Afghanistan’s Taliban government, providing a base to plan the September 11 attacks, which prompted the initial U.S. invasion of Afghanistan nearly 20 years ago.

The Taliban’s continued push for power across Afghanistan is also bolstered by the group’s recently gained international legitimacy, starting with the U.S.-Taliban peace deal and more recently its senior members’ visit to China that saw what appeared to be warming ties with Beijing.

“China, unfortunately, have given them [the Taliban] a red carpet just recently, those things need to be ended if we are to see a stable region,” Nadery said.

‘They’ve got to fight for themselves’

At the White House on Tuesday, President Joe Biden told reporters that he does not regret his decision to withdraw American troops from Afghanistan, despite shocking gains by the Taliban.

“Look, we spent over a trillion dollars over twenty years, we trained and equipped with modern equipment over 300,000 Afghan forces,” Biden said.

“Afghan leaders have to come together,” the president added. “They’ve got to fight for themselves, fight for their nation.”

In April, Biden ordered the full withdrawal of approximately 3,000 U.S. troops from Afghanistan by Sept. 11.

The Pentagon’s colossal task of removing servicemembers and equipment out of Afghanistan is nearly complete, with the U.S. military mission slated to end by Aug. 31.

Since the U.S. began its withdrawal from the war-torn country, the Taliban has made stunning battlefield advances despite being vastly outnumbered by the Afghan military.

On Wednesday, the Taliban seized three provincial Afghan capitals as well as a local army headquarters in Kunduz, according to the Associated Press. Wednesday’s gains give the Taliban approximately two-thirds control of the nation.

What’s more, the Taliban swiftly seized five provincial Afghan capitals over the weekend, taking three in one day alone.

An Afghan special force member attends a military operation against the Taliban fighters in Kandak Anayat village of Kunduz city, Afghanistan, July 23, 2021.

Ajmal Kakar | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

At the Pentagon, spokesman John Kirby told reporters on Monday that while the Biden administration plans to continue to provide air support, there was not much else the U.S. military could do.

“We will certainly support from the air, where and when feasible, but that’s no substitute for leadership on the ground, it’s no substitute for political leadership in Kabul, it’s no substitute for using the capabilities and capacity that we know they have,” Kirby said.

Kirby added that while the Pentagon is concerned to see such advances by the Taliban, the Afghan military must now leverage the years of training from U.S. and NATO coalition forces.

“They have an Air Force, the Taliban doesn’t. They have modern weaponry and organizational skills, the Taliban doesn’t. They have superior numbers to the Taliban,” Kirby said. “They have the advantages, and it’s really now their time to use those advantages.”

Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby speaks at press conference at the Pentagon January 28, 2021 in Arlington,Virginia.

Yasin Ozturk | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

As the security situation in Afghanistan worsens, the State Department is looking at ways in which to downsize the U.S. Embassy in Kabul. There are approximately 600 U.S. troops protecting the embassy grounds.

“Obviously it is a challenging security environment and were we able, were we confident and were we comfortable having a larger staffing presence there we would,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters Tuesday when asked about the reduction in staff in Kabul.

“We are evaluating the threat environment on a daily basis. The Embassy is in regular contact with Washington with the most senior people in this building, who in turn are in regular contact with our colleagues at the [National Security Council] in the White House,” Price added.

Amanda Macias contributed to this report from Washington.

Categories
Politics

Afghan warfare has entered ‘deadlier and extra damaging section,’ UN says

Taliban fighters with a vehicle on a highway in Afghanistan.

Saibal Das | The India Today Group | Getty Images

The U.N. special envoy for Afghanistan on Friday said the war in the country has entered a “deadlier and more destructive phase” and questioned the Taliban’s commitment to political settlement. 

“A party that was genuinely committed to a negotiated settlement would not risk so many civilian casualties, because it would understand that the process of reconciliation will be more challenging, the more blood is shed,” Deborah Lyons told the U.N. Security Council on Friday. 

This comes after Afghan civilian casualties climbed to more than 1,000 in the past month, and as the Taliban continues to achieve territorial gains in Afghanistan. 

Fighting between the Taliban and Afghan security forces has raged since April when U.S. and coalition forces began their withdrawal from the country. The withdrawal is set to be completed later this month. 

On Friday, the Taliban captured its first provincial capital, Zaranj of the Nimroz province, since launching its offensive. 

The group also killed the Afghan government’s top media officer in Kabul on Friday, just days after attempting to assassinate the country’s acting defense minister, according to The Associated Press. 

The Taliban is also in control of large rural areas of Afghanistan, and is now challenging Afghan security forces in several large cities, Lyons said. This includes Herat, near the western border with Iran, as well as Kandahar and Lashkar Gah in the south, which are “under significant pressure.”

“To attack urban areas is to knowingly inflict enormous harm and cause massive civilian casualties. Nonetheless, the threatening of large urban areas appears to be a strategic decision by the Taliban, who have accepted the likely carnage that will ensue,” she said.

Peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban that began last year have not made any substantive progress, Lyons said. 

Lyons added that the U.N. expected a reduction in violence in Afghanistan after the U.S.-Taliban deal was signed in February. But instead, there was a 50% increase in civilian casualties in the country as more cities were attacked by the Taliban. 

Afghan citizens “expect far greater engagement and visible support” from the U.N. Security Council, Lyons said. She urged the council to issue a statement that calls for an end to violence in the country, and to ensure “a meaningful peace process.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki also addressed the recent attacks by the Taliban at a Friday press briefing, stating that their actions won’t help them gain international legitimacy.

“Our view is that, if the Taliban claim to want international legitimacy, these actions are not going to get them the legitimacy they seek,” Psaki said.

 “They do not have to stay on this trajectory. They can choose to devote the same energy to the peace process as they are to their military campaign.”.

Categories
Politics

Trump Has Constructed Struggle Chest of Extra Than $100 Million

Although former President Donald J. Trump stepped down and was banned from leading social media platforms, he was the Republican Party’s dominant fundraiser for the first half of 2021, ending in June with a war chest of more than 100 million US dollar new federal campaign proposals made this weekend.

Mr Trump raised far more money than any other Republican through WinRed, the party’s main online donation processing site, records show, and more than any of the Republican Party’s three main donation arms themselves. His cash holdings of nearly $ 102 million were also higher than any of the party committees.

The second largest online fundraiser among Republican politicians was Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, who delivered the GOP response to President Biden’s first congressional speech that spring. Mr Scott raised $ 7.8 million online.

Mr Trump’s advisors falsely announced Saturday that “its affiliated political committees raised nearly $ 82 million in the first six months of 2021”.

That number included transfers of at least $ 23 million to his new political action committees, which, according to an analysis of federal filings, had actually been collected on other Trump-related accounts last year.

A spokesman for Mr Trump did not immediately comment on the discrepancy other than to defend the operation’s bookkeeping.

All in all, WinRed’s records showed that Mr Trump had raised more than $ 56 million online in various accounts in the first six months of the year.

The largest part, $ 34.3 million, came in a joint account with the Republican National Committee known as the Trump Make America Great Again Committee. Mr Trump’s Political Action Committee is said to get 75 percent of what went into the joint account, and the party got 25 percent.

In addition, Mr Trump raised more than $ 21 million online directly to two new Save America political action committees that he controls.

Mr Trump has made denying the fact that he lost the 2020 election – which Mr Biden won by a majority of seven million votes – a centerpiece of his post-presidency term. He has repeatedly argued without evidence that the election was ruled fraudulently, even after losing a wave of appeal proceedings, including before the Supreme Court.

He attributed this fake fight for his financial support. “On behalf of the millions of men and women who share my outrage and want me to continue fighting for the truth,” Trump said in a statement, “I am grateful for your support.”

The campaign funding data submitted to the Federal Electoral Commission cover the first half of 2021.

Mr Trump raised by far the most online money of any Republican, despite pausing many of his online recruitment from January 6, the day of the Capitol Riots, until the end of February.

Mr Trump made his first post-presidency speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference in late February, urging supporters to donate to him instead of another GOP unit, positioning himself as a potential rival to the existing Republican party apparatus.

“There is only one way to add to our efforts to vote America First Republican Conservatives and in return make America great again,” Trump said on February 28. “And that’s through Save America, PAC and DonaldJTrump .com.”

Mr Trump has raised a ton of donations: nearly $ 3.5 million in his various PACs.

It was also WinRed’s biggest single day in 2021, records show.

Mr Trump’s public events and announcements appear to be closely related to his fundraising. For example, Trump’s short-lived start of a blog page sharing his thoughts and opinions on political developments, titled “From the Desk of Donald J. Trump” in early May has been widely viewed as a poor substitute for a social media platform. The site was soon scrapped.

But the site still seems to have generated real money for the Trump operation.

His Save America committee had raised an average of $ 108,000 in the five days prior to the launch of the “Desk” page; The PAC raised an average of around $ 421,000 a day for the five days that followed, including more than $ 900,000 in one day.

Much of the money raised by the Trump Make America Great Again Committee came through Mr. Trump’s recurring donation program, which led countless backers to unwittingly donate repeatedly through the use of pre-checked boxes.

An investigation by the New York Times earlier this year showed how the program sparked a wave of fraud complaints and reimbursement claims that lasted through 2021.

Mr Trump’s fundraising slowed over the first six months of the year. In January, the month of the Capitol Riot and his subsequent impeachment in the waning days of his presidency, Mr. Trump raised $ 13.8 million for the Trump Make America Great Again committee.

By June that total had shrunk, though it was still a solid $ 2.6 million, almost entirely from recurring donations. By July, party officials had stopped resigning, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the party’s internal financial affairs.

Categories
Politics

How Veterans Are Working to Get Afghan Companions in Struggle to the US

EDGEWATER, Md. – In einem körnigen Video-Chat teilte Zak das Neueste aus seiner umkämpften Provinz in Afghanistan mit, ein ebenso düsteres wie alltägliches Update. „Die Taliban haben letzte Nacht einen Zettel bei mir zu Hause hinterlassen. Sie sagten: ‚Ergebt euch heute Nacht, oder wir bringen euch um’“, erzählte er in einem eher resignierten als verängstigten Ton.

Maj. Thomas Schueman rutschte auf seinem Stuhl in einem 7.000 Meilen entfernten Café herum, als Zak die ausufernde Gewalt in dem Land beschrieb, in dem sie zusammen als Zugführer und unschätzbarer Dolmetscher gedient hatten.

Die Männer kämpften 2010 in der Schlacht um Sangin, einer der tödlichsten Kampagnen des 20-jährigen Afghanistankrieges, und arbeiteten später in Kabul als Berater der Armee. “Es war sehr gefährlich”, sagte Zak, der darum bat, ihn nur mit seinem Spitznamen zu identifizieren, weil er um seine Sicherheit fürchtete. „Aber wissen Sie, Amerika kam, um uns zu helfen und hat Seite an Seite mit uns daran gearbeitet, unser Land aufzubauen und Frieden und Demokratie zu bringen. Du weißt nie, was das Leben dir bringt.“

Zak, der drei Jahre lang für das Militär arbeitete, wurde versichert, dass ein US-Visum seine Belohnung sein würde, nachdem er sein Leben riskiert hatte, um die Streitkräfte der Koalition zu unterstützen. Aber selbst mit der Hilfe von Major Schueman bei Anträgen, Anrufen, Briefen und Bitten in seinem Namen hat Zak sechs Jahre auf die Genehmigung gewartet.

“Ich werde jeden Tag und jede Nacht für Sie arbeiten, bis wir uns darum gekümmert haben”, beharrte Major Schueman, ein Marineinfanterieoffizier, der jetzt das Naval War College in Rhode Island besucht. “Ich werde dich nie vergessen, Bruder.”

Lange bevor die Biden-Regierung versprach, Tausende von afghanischen Dolmetschern und anderen, die von Repressalien der Taliban bedroht waren, zu evakuieren, arbeiteten Militärveteranen daran, ihre vertrauenswürdigen Partner in die USA zu bringen.

Diese privaten Bemühungen – oft angespornt durch verzweifelte WhatsApp- und Facebook-Nachrichten ehemaliger Kollegen in Afghanistan – haben erneut an Dringlichkeit gewonnen, da die US- und NATO-Streitkräfte ihren Rückzug aus dem Land abschließen und Taliban-Kämpfer große Landstriche übernehmen.

Im Rahmen von zwei speziellen Visaprogrammen wurde Tausenden von Afghanen die Durchreise versprochen, aber die Dokumentations- und Sicherheitsanforderungen haben viele Antragsteller in Verlegenheit gebracht. Das Repräsentantenhaus hat am Donnerstag dafür gestimmt, den Prozess zu beschleunigen und die Anzahl der verfügbaren Visa zu erhöhen, aber der Gesetzentwurf sieht im Senat einer ungewissen Zukunft entgegen, wo das Visaprogramm parteiübergreifend unterstützt wird, aber Fragen zur Finanzierung gestellt werden.

Auch die Biden-Regierung bemüht sich, mehr zu tun, und Beamte sagen, dass eine erste Gruppe von etwa 2.500 Afghanen und ihren Familien in den kommenden Tagen in einer Basis in Virginia eintreffen wird.

Für Veteranen eines Krieges, der vor vielen Jahren nicht gewonnen werden konnte, erfüllt der Einsatz ihrer Dolmetscher mindestens ein versprochenes Ziel: die Afghanen zu schützen, die im Kampf geholfen haben.

Für die Dolmetscher, deren Identität für immer mit dem von den Amerikanern geführten Krieg verstrickt ist, war die Reise gefährlich und langsam und dauerte oft Jahre länger als erwartet. Mehrere Tausend sitzen immer noch in der Falle, während Taliban-Kämpfer ihre Kontrolle in Gebieten außerhalb der Hauptstadt verstärken.

“Ich fühle die Trauer des Krieges”, sagte Major Schueman. “Ich habe diesen Krieg ungefähr drei Jahre lang gekämpft, aber sie sind seit 20 Jahren in diesem Krieg, und jedes US-Militärmitglied ist gekommen und gegangen.”

Weniger als ein Jahr nachdem Ramesh Darwishi 2011 seine Zusammenarbeit mit amerikanischen Special Operations-Teams aufgenommen hatte, begannen die Taliban, sein Handy anzurufen und sein Leben zu bedrohen.

Im Jahr 2015, nachdem er seine Familie in eine Reihe von sicheren Häusern umgezogen hatte, beantragte er ein US-Visum, das im vergangenen September genehmigt wurde. Herr Darwishi und seine Frau Farashta liehen sich Geld von Verwandten, um sich die notwendigen medizinischen Untersuchungen und Flugtickets für die Reise leisten zu können.

Die Aufständischen haben vor zwei Wochen das Haus der Familie Darwishi in der Provinz Farah angezündet und die meisten ihrer nahen Verwandten sind untergetaucht.

Herr Darwishi, 32, sagte, er könne nicht verstehen, warum es so lange gedauert habe, ein Visum zu erhalten, nachdem er Green Berets fünf Jahre in Folge jede Nacht auf Missionen begleitet und Schießereien, Hinterhalte und improvisierte Bombenexplosionen überlebt hatte.

Er schreibt seinem Freund Ian Parker zu, einem ehemaligen Soldaten der US-Armee, mit dem er in Kandahar afghanische Kommandos ausgebildet hat, seinen Visumantrag durchgesetzt zu haben, nachdem dieser jahrelang ins Stocken geraten war. Herr Parker, 37, jetzt ein Auftragnehmer, der seine Zeit zwischen Auslandseinsätzen und seinem Haus in Florida aufteilt, rief Mitglieder des Kongresses an.

„Ich habe gesehen, dass andere Dolmetscher in weniger als einem Jahr zugelassen wurden, sicherlich weniger als zwei Jahren“, sagte Parker, der seinen Freund in den Vereinigten Staaten noch nicht persönlich treffen konnte. “Ich habe getan, was ich für richtig hielt.”

Aber selbst nachdem Herr Darwishis Papierkram in Bewegung gekommen war, dauerte es 354 Tage, bis er und seine Frau in die Vereinigten Staaten einreisen konnten, sagte Herr Parker.

Das Paar ließ sich in Northglenn, Colorado, in der Nähe von Denver nieder, nachdem Mr. Parker vorgeschlagen hatte, dass die Landschaft sie an ihre Heimat erinnern könnte.

„Die ersten Tage hier waren ziemlich gut für mich“, sagte Herr Darwishi. „Niemand war hinter mir. Niemand wollte mich töten.“

Aber nach sechs Monaten versiegte das Geld, das er von einem Flüchtlingsbüro für die Miete einer Einzimmerwohnung bekam. Kein Arbeitgeber oder College in der Umgebung hat seinen Bachelor-Abschluss aus Afghanistan anerkannt, obwohl er als Jahrgangsbester abschloss. Und während eines Vorstellungsgesprächs für Jobs infizierte sich Herr Darwishi mit dem Coronavirus und gab es an seine Frau weiter, die bereits mit einer Reihe von Erkrankungen zu kämpfen hatte. Sie war anderthalb Monate krank.

Afghanische Freunde legten Geld zusammen, um ihm eine Limousine zu kaufen, damit er für einen Lebensmittellieferdienst fahren konnte, wo er etwa 215 US-Dollar pro Woche verdient, nachdem er das Benzin bezahlt hat.

Es hat nicht gereicht.

Auf einem Couchtisch in ihrer bescheidenen Wohnung saß ein Räumungsbescheid, neben einer Broschüre für eine Wohnanlage für einkommensschwache Familien.

„Manche Leute nennen uns Helden“, sagte Herr Darwishi. “Manche nennen uns obdachlos.”

Auf einem Regal in der Wohnung, die er bis zum 1. Oktober räumen muss, hat Herr Darwishi vier gerahmte Anerkennungsurkunden von den US-Militäreinheiten und Auftragnehmern, die er mehr als acht Jahre lang unterstützt hat. Er hat auch mehrere Abschlusszeugnisse von Online-Kursen, die er kürzlich abgeschlossen hat, in der Hoffnung, an einer nahe gelegenen Universität in ein Informatikstudium einzusteigen.

Am vergangenen Samstag traf sich eine Gruppe von Afghanen und Amerikanern in einem abgelegenen Haus in den Mammutbäumen südlich von San Jose, machten Pizza in einem Außenofen und schwelgen in Erinnerungen an die frühen Tage.

Unter den Gästen waren Mohammed Yousafzai, ein Dolmetscher, und Adrian Kinsella, ein ehemaliger Kapitän des Marine Corps, der sich 2010 in Afghanistan traf, als Herr Yousafzai seinem Zug zugeteilt wurde.

„Wir haben uns darauf verlassen, dass er alles übersetzt, uns aber auch die tatsächliche Bedeutung und den Kontext hinter den Wörtern liefert“, sagte Kinsella. „Er hat sich nie darüber beschwert, dass er zwei Patrouillen am Tag macht. Er hasste den Feind noch mehr als wir.“

Nach der Ankunft der Amerikaner in Afghanistan im Jahr 2001, sagte Yousafzai, gingen keine Männer mehr mit den abgetrennten Händen von Ladendieben über den Marktplatz seiner Heimatstadt, und er konnte eine Fußballuniform tragen, ohne Angst vor Strafen zu haben, wenn er und seine Geschwister 20 Meilen radelten zur Schule. „Ich war so aufgeregt und glücklich“, sagte Herr Yousafzai. “Die Leute haben angefangen, ihr Leben zu leben.”

Mit 18 von einem amerikanischen Auftragnehmer rekrutiert, geriet er bald ins Fadenkreuz der Taliban, die aus Rache seinen Vater ermordeten. Nachdem er nach vier Jahren seine Arbeit bei der Koalition aufgegeben hatte, war er eines Tages ständig auf der Flucht, wurde bedroht und einem Kugelhagel ausgesetzt, als er eines Tages aus einem Versteck in Pakistan nach Kabul schlüpfte, um sein Auto zu verkaufen.

Nach der Trennung von den Marines schrieb sich Herr Kinsella an der juristischen Fakultät in Berkeley ein und bat seine Kommilitonen, bei Herrn Yousafzais Fall zu helfen, der seit 2010 anhängig war. Herr Kinsella verbrachte die nächsten zwei Jahre damit, Senatoren und Medienvertreter zu kontaktieren, um zu gewinnen Durchgang für Herrn Yousafzai und seine Familie, einschließlich eines dreijährigen Bruders, der von den Taliban entführt wurde, die ihn in einem Schuppen hielten, während sie warteten. Eine Notiz bezog sich auf „einen Freund der Amerikaner“ und wies Herrn Yousafzai an, ein Lösegeld in Höhe von 35.000 Dollar auf dem Grab seines Vaters zu hinterlassen.

Schließlich wurde Herrn Yousafzai Anfang 2014 ein Visum erteilt. Er kehrte mit seiner Mutter nach Kandahar zurück, die seine Dokumente trug, weil sie wusste, dass sie nicht durchsucht werden würde, und er fuhr nach San Francisco. Seine Mutter, Brüder und Schwestern folgten bald.

Die neuen Nachbarn der Familie in San Jose richteten ihr Zuhause ein und halfen ihnen, sich einzuleben, bekamen später medizinische Versorgung und Nachhilfelehrer und unterrichteten schließlich die älteren Kinder fahren. “Ich ging auf meine Nachbarschafts-E-Mail und sagte den Leuten: ‘Diese Familie ist vom Himmel gefallen und sitzt auf einem Boden ohne nichts'”, sagte Katie Senigaglia, der das Haus im Wald gehört, in dem sich die Gruppe zum Pizzaessen versammelte.

Major Schueman gibt zu, dass er an dem Tag, an dem er Zak traf, in einer Transaktionsstimmung war. Er hatte schon mit so vielen Dolmetschern zusammengearbeitet, aber Zak war anders. Er war körperlich fit und sein Englisch war ausgezeichnet. Vor allem war er bereit, nach Sangin zu gehen, was viele Dolmetscher angesichts des gefährlichen Geländes mieden.

“Ich habe sofort erkannt, dass er ein besonderer Kerl ist, und ich hatte großes Glück, ihn zu haben”, sagte Major Schueman. Marinesoldaten in den anderen Zügen begannen, diesen Neuzugang mit Neid zu betrachten, aber Major Schueman hatte nicht die Absicht, ihn zu teilen.

Die Patrouillen waren lang und furchteinflößend, als die Marines durch vermintes Gebiet in Richtung Dörfer marschierten und oft in einen Hinterhalt gerieten, bei dem zahlreiche Truppen getötet und schwer verletzt wurden.

Irgendwann hörte Zak aus der Ferne zwei Taliban-Kämpfer, die in ihren Funkgeräten sprachen, als sie einen Angriff auf die Marines organisierten, die langsam in Formation auf sie zukamen, hinter einem Ingenieur mit einem Metalldetektor.

“Er rennt einfach durch das Feld, packt den Kerl an”, erinnerte sich Major Schueman an Zak, der nicht nur den Angriff verhinderte, sondern auch eine geräumte Spur mit seinen Fußspuren markierte, damit die Marines vorrücken konnten.

„Es gibt keinen anderen Dolmetscher, der bereit wäre, all dieses Risiko auf sich zu nehmen“, sagte er. „Wir würden Zak eine geladene Waffe geben und ihn in Sicherheit bringen, während wir an einem Unfall arbeiten. Ich habe noch mehrere andere Arten von Zak-Geschichten, aber ich denke, es ist ein Beweis für das Vertrauen, das wir in ihn hatten.“

Als Zak Sangin verließ, nachdem dieser Einsatz beendet war, “gingen wir alle in die Landezone, in der die Hubschrauber landeten, und, wissen Sie, es schickte einen unserer eigenen los”, sagte Major Schueman.

Zak ist nicht in der Lage, den zweiten von zwei Auftragnehmern zu finden, die ihn eingestellt haben, was einen bereits mühsamen Prozess verzögert, der ihn mutlos zurücklässt. „Ich habe zwei Jahre bei der Army gearbeitet und hatte nichts. Ich habe keine Arbeitspapiere, nichts. Und deshalb verzögern sich meine Prozesse“, sagte er.

So weit weg von Kabul, in einer von Taliban umzingelten Provinz, ist es für ihn schwer zu erkennen, wie die Amerikaner ihn jetzt finden können, da er weit weg versteckt ist.

Die Taliban hinterlassen auf Zaks Handy bedrohliche Voicemail-Nachrichten. Er ist nicht in der Lage, in die Stadt zu gehen und einen Job zu finden, um seine Frau und seine vier Kinder zu ernähren.

„Ich kann keinen Weg finden, ein Leben zu führen“, sagte Zak.

Categories
Health

Warfare, Covid and local weather change gasoline starvation disaster killing 11 each minute

After a fire in a refugee camp in Ukhia in the southeastern district of Cox’s Bazar on March 24, 2021, children are seen eating food provided by NGOs and social organizations.

Yousuf Tushar | LightRakete | Getty Images

LONDON – According to a new Oxfam report released on Friday, the number of people who died of starvation increased six-fold over the past year to surpass deaths from Covid-19.

Up to 11 people die of starvation and malnutrition every minute as the proportion of people suffering from starvation-like conditions has skyrocketed since the pandemic began, the global charity said in a paper titled “The Hunger Virus Multiplies” .

For comparison: an estimated 7 people die of Covid-19 every minute.

The statistics are overwhelming, but we must remember that these numbers are individual people who are exposed to unimaginable suffering. One person is too much too.

Abby Maxman

President and CEO, Oxfam America

Main causes of extreme hunger

War and conflict remain the leading cause of hunger, accounting for two-thirds of hunger-related deaths worldwide. However, the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic and economic shocks as a result of Covid-19, as well as the worsening climate crisis, have starved tens of millions, the report said.

Global food prices are also up 40%, the highest increase in more than 10 years, the report said.

“The statistics are mind-boggling, but we must remember that these numbers are made up of individuals exposed to unimaginable suffering. Even one person is too much, ”said Abby Maxman, President and CEO of Oxfam America.

A relative prays on a cremation site during the final rites of a Covid-19 victim.

Majority world | Universal picture group | Getty Images

Oxfam named war-torn countries like Afghanistan, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen among the world’s worst hunger hotspots.

“Hunger continues to be used as a weapon of war to steal food and water from civilians and to hamper humanitarian aid,” said Maxman. “People cannot live safely or find food when their markets are bombed and crops and livestock are destroyed.”

Meanwhile, food insecurity has worsened in what the charity has dubbed “emerging epicentres of hunger” such as India, South Africa and Brazil – some of the countries hardest hit by Covid-19 infections.

But even countries with relatively resilient food systems like the US have been rocked by the pandemic and recent climate shocks, the report said.

Hurt the most vulnerable people

In any case, vulnerable groups like women, displaced people and informal workers are hardest hit, Maxman said.

“Marginalized groups are hardest hit by conflict and hunger. Too often women and girls eat last and least. ” She said.

Governments must prevent conflict from fueling catastrophic hunger.

Abby Maxman

President and CEO, Oxfam America

The spike in hunger-related deaths comes in a year when global military spending rose by $ 51 billion – enough to cover six and a half times what the United Nations believes it needs to stop hunger.

Meanwhile, the world’s 10 richest people have risen by $ 413 billion in net worth over the past year – 11 times the estimated cost of the United Nations for global humanitarian aid.

“Governments must prevent conflict from fueling catastrophic hunger and instead ensure that aid agencies reach those in need,” Maxman said, calling for multilateral support from policymakers.

“We need the US to take a leadership role in ending this hunger crisis by pushing for an end to the conflicts that fuel this famine, providing the vital resources to save lives now, and helping communities achieve a safe one Building the future. “