WAR US to leave troops in Afghanistan beyond May, 9/11 new goal

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jward

passin' thru
Walid Phares
@WalidPhares

Aug 14

The fall of #Kabul is the fall of US foreign policy under the #Biden Administration.
The int community should not recognize the #TalibanCoup after having designated them as terrorists, abusers of human rights & women & minorities rights. Logically the UN should send a force under chapter 7 & remove them from power, do a referendum. But then there's the money..
 

jward

passin' thru
Where are US flights from Kabul going?


Secretary of State Antony Blinken has praised the 13 countries which have agreed to temporarily host at-risk Afghans evacuated from Kabul.


He said: "We deeply appreciate the support they have offered, and are proud to partner with them in our shared support of the Afghan people."


Refugees not already cleared for resettlement in the US will be housed at facilities in:


  • Albania
  • Canada
  • Colombia
  • Costa Rica
  • Chile
  • Kosovo
  • North Macedonia
  • Mexico
  • Poland
  • Qatar
  • Rwanda
  • Ukraine
  • Uganda

The following nations will serve as transit points for evacuees:


  • Bahrain
  • Britain
  • Denmark
  • Germany
  • Italy
  • Kazakhstan
  • Kuwait
  • Qatar
  • Tajikistan
  • Turkey
  • United Arab Emirates
  • Uzbekistan
 

jward

passin' thru
Investigate possible 'intelligence failure', says former MP
Dominic Grieve, former chairman of Parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee, has called for it to investigate whether an "intelligence failure" led to the chaotic withdrawal of allied forces.
Dominic Grieve, a former Conservative MP and attorney general, said: "I think if they had known this was going to happen, would the US withdrawal have proceeded in the way it did?
"It must be an intelligence failure that one should end up with thousands of people crowding into an airport seeking to leave a country when it has been triggered by military decisions by the United States as to how it was going to conduct its withdrawal."


Sky News correspondent sees Kabul airport mayhem - and bodies covered in white sheets
The mornings are always challenging on the barricades, writes chief correspondent Stuart Ramsay.
The British soldiers know that after a night waiting for the evacuation process to restart the tens of thousands camped on the road leading to their base will try to rush their way through.
Today it was different. Very different.
Today it turned chaotic in an instant.
Within minutes this was an emergency, nothing to do with process; the soldiers found themselves just trying to save lives.
At the front of the queue people were being crushed to death.
 

jward

passin' thru
Yup. Those SOBs just used the blood of the worlds'
innocents stuck in A'stan to oil this kabuki chit show
they orchestrated to divest themselves of him
 

jward

passin' thru
Ouch


Sebastian Gorka DrG
@SebGorka

7m

Does that include the ones you abandoned in Afghanistan you BetaCuck?



Secretary Antony Blinken
@SecBlinken


United States government official

On this International Day of Remembrance and Tribute to the #VictimsofTerrorism, we honor those we have lost to terrorism, at home and abroad. The United States stands resolute in our commitment to holding terrorists to account.

9:25 AM · Aug 21, 2021·Twitter Web App

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jward

passin' thru
Lapis Lazuli Corridor: A Gate on the Beijing-London Line | ANKASAM | Ankara Center for Crisis and Policy Research
By Özge ELETEK

6-7 minutes


While the political activity in Afghanistan continues; It remains unclear who will complete the power gap in the country. All eyes are on China, which is trying to increase its influence in the country after the United States of America (USA). However, unlike the USA, China is trying to achieve its effectiveness through the Belt-Road Project, which it started in 2013. Afghanistan, which is the key to Eurasia, which is defined as the heartland of the world, is not only on the east-west line; It is also in a very strategic position on the north-south line.

In this context, the Lapis Lazuli Corridor, which starts from China and extends to England and forms a strategic field of the region called the Middle Corridor, draws attention as an extremely significant route. The Central Corridor, which reduces the export duration between Beijing and London to 12 days, is extremely affordable for delivering Chinese goods to European markets.

Lapis Lazuli Corridor, which was decided to be opened for the first time in 2017 at the 7th Afghanistan Regional Economic Cooperation Conference (RECCA) held in Ashgabat, the capital of Turkmenistan, was officially opened at the end of 2018. The corridor starts from the ports of Akina and Turgundi in the Afghan cities of Faryab and Herat. From here, it reaches the Turkmenbashi Port in Turkmenistan, and then go to Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, crossing the Caspian Sea and go to the ports of Poti and Batumi in Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia. The corridor passes through various ports in the Black Sea and finally reaches Europe via Turkey. Lapis Lazuli Corridor includes road, rail and sea transport.[1]
The name “Lapis Lazuli” comes from the historical way Afghanistan’s lapis lazuli and other semi-precious stones were exported to the Caucasus, Russia, the Balkans, Europe and North Africa over 2000 years ago.[2]
As can be expected, increasing the variety of transportation has emerged as a global necessity with the Covid-19 outbreak. Many disruptions in maritime transportation recently showed that transportation routes should be diversified. Therefore, in the light of current developments, the importance of railways has been understood once again. In this context, the importance of the Lapis Lazuli Corridor, which is of vital importance in terms of east-west and north-south trade and relatively cheaper in terms of Asian-European goods transportation, has increased.
This transportation corridor, which main route is the Afghanistan-Turkmenistan-Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey line, can play a key role in solving some significant economic problems for Central Asia. The aforementioned corridor is designed to promote the further development of production in the region and to increase the economy of landlocked Afghanistan.

Moreover, the Lapis Lazuli Corridor can contribute to expanding the economic opportunities of citizens in various countries. The corridor has the potential to transform the trade and transit dynamics in the region in a way that creates opportunities for development and mutual cooperation.
The corridor has many priorities within the scope of its medium and long-term initiatives. These can be listed as:[3]
  • Improve road conditions and transit facilities along major highways
  • Expand rail links between Afghanistan and Turkey and beyond
  • Improve multi-modal land ports in priority places in each of the five Lapis Lazuli Route countries
  • Undertake a Cost-Benefit Analysis on establishing Cross-Border Economic (Tax Free) Zones between the countries along the corridor.
Furthermore, Corridor Project (“East-West Trans-Caspian Trade and Transport Corridor”) and will also compliment other regional transport corridors such as the Five Nations Railway Corridor.[4]
As mentioned above, the Lapis Lazuli Corridor is just one of many transit lines in the region. However, it is not only Afghanistan-based developments but also all negative events in the region prevent consensus and progress on transit lines. The rising tension in Afghanistan, which is the starting point of the corridor, has created an unstable and uncertain environment. The increasing of conflicts, on the other hand, prevents the prediction of where things will go, and a power gap is created in the country in every sense.

With the withdrawal of the US Army from Afghanistan, the Beijing administration’s statement that it will continue its investments in Afghanistan indicates that the power gap in the country can be filled by China. As a matter of fact, in the statement made by the Taliban should not be ignored. Taliban viewed China’s investments in Afghanistan positively and promised to provide security guarantees.[5]

As a result; Lapis Lazuli Corridor, which creates an advantageous situation not only for Afghanistan but also countries in the region and all the transit countries on the line, is extremely vital because it brings a new gate to global trade. Therefore, the corridor is not only political, also it will be beneficial both economically and socially.
[1] “The Geopolitics of the Lapis Lazuli Corridor”, The Diplomat, The Geopolitics of the Lapis Lazuli Corridor, (Date of access: 18.07.2021).
[2] “Lapis-Lazuli Transit, Trade&Transport Route (Lapis Lazuli Corridor)”, RECCA, Lapis-Lazuli Transit, Trade & Transport Route (Lapis Lazuli Corridor) – RECCA, (Date of access: 26.07.2021).
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
[5] “Afganistan Öznesinde Kuşak ve Yol İnisiyatifi”, CRI Türk, Afganistan öznesinde Kuşak ve Yol İnisiyatifi, (Date of access: 18.07.2021).
 

jward

passin' thru
The Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan continues following the collapse of the Afghan government in August. Here is the latest:

- According to a NATO diplomat, at least 20 people have died in the past seven days in and around Kabul's airport during evacuation processes

- CNN reports that the US military is establishing “alternative routes” to Kabul airport in coordination with the Taliban because “there is a strong possibility” the Islamic State group is trying to carry out an attack

- Taliban co-founder Mullah Baradar arrived in Kabul for talks with other leaders as they hammer out a new Afghan government under the group, Reuters says

- The US Embassy issued a new security warning on Saturday telling Americans in Afghanistan not to travel to the Kabul airport without individual instruction from a US government representative, the AP reports
 

jward

passin' thru
Reuters
@Reuters

24m

President Joe Biden said that the Taliban had not taken any action against U.S. forces controlling Kabul airport, and had largely followed through on their pledge to let Americans reach the airport safely https://reut.rs/3kgsWTB
View: https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1429659663407091717?s=20


+++++++++++++++++



U.S. Embassy Kabul
@USEmbassyKabul

25m

Who should come to the Hamid Karzai International Airport? https://af.usembassy.gov/who-should-com
View: https://twitter.com/USEmbassyKabul/status/1429659565478621185?s=20
 

jward

passin' thru
washingtonpost.com
Biden says safe zone around Kabul airport to expand, as Pentagon enlists commercial airlines to aid evacuations
Karoun Demirjian, John Hudson, Dan Lamothe, Adela Suliman

7-9 minutes​


President Biden said Sunday that the U.S. military is “executing a plan” to move stranded American citizens to the Kabul airport in greater numbers, including through an expansion of a safe zone around the facility and by creating conduits for people to access the compound “safely and effectively.”
“Our first priority in Kabul,” Biden said in remarks at the White House, “is getting American citizens out of the country as quickly and as safely as possible.”
The president would not say how the plan for “increased rational access to the airport” is being carried out or whether U.S. troops have expanded their perimeter outside the airport and further into Kabul, which could put them at heightened risk of attack from Taliban factions manning security checkpoints and Islamic State operatives who, U.S. officials warn, pose a serious threat.

President Biden on Aug. 22 vowed again to prioritize evacuating American citizens from Afghanistan. (The Washington Post)
In recent days, the Qatari ambassador to Afghanistan has escorted small groups of Americans into the airport, according to two people familiar with the effort who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive operation. American citizens have been instructed to meet at rally points in the city, and the ambassador then accompanies them to guarantee safe passage, these people said. Qatar has served as an intermediary between the United States and the Taliban at several stages of the American withdrawal, sponsoring peace talks and serving as the first point of refuge for many evacuees.
The operational shift comes as U.S. commanders gear up for what officials hope will be a dramatic acceleration of evacuations from Afghanistan in the coming days, enlisting domestic commercial airliners and a number of foreign allies to aid the effort.

Evacuations had slowed over the past couple days, as backlogs in way stations like Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar prevented planeloads of people from departing Kabul, grounding planned flights out and degrading humanitarian conditions at the already overcrowded airport.
The addition of 18 commercial airplanes — activated, the Pentagon announced Sunday, as part of the Civil Reserve Air Fleet — is intended to address those bottlenecks. The jetliners, contracted from domestic airlines United, American, Atlas, Delta, Omni and Hawaiian, will not be flown into Kabul, but used instead to move those taken to places like Qatar on to other destinations in Europe, the Americas, Africa and the Persian Gulf. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said earlier in the weekend that 13 countries had pledged to temporarily host evacuees, while an additional 12 had agreed to serve as transit points.
Biden said Sunday that the mobilization represented a “first stage,” leaving the possibility that more flights could be added to the effort.

On Saturday, the U.S. military operated 14 evacuation flights that took about 3,900 people out of the country, while 35 other planes evacuated approximately the same number, according to White House and Pentagon officials. That’s up twofold from Friday — but still short of the 5,000 to 9,000 people per day that senior military officials have said they have the capability to evacuate themselves.
About 28,000 people have been evacuated since Aug. 14, including 11,000 over the weekend, Biden said. “We see no reason why this tempo will not be kept up,” the president told reporters.
Yet the backlog remains significant — particularly at the Kabul airport, where people have been waiting for days in increasingly squalid conditions to learn when it might be their turn to board a plane to safety. Over 10,000 people had crammed themselves inside the airport perimeter on Sunday, as more clamored to get in.

The crush and chaos outside the airport killed seven Afghan civilians, including a toddler, on Saturday, according to the British military. Although it appears the Taliban has tried to disperse those crowds, some Afghans stayed anyway, according to a senior U.S. official. The gates to the airport remain closed to most people Sunday, the official said, though U.S. citizens and Afghans with approved special immigrant visas are being let through.
Many American citizens and U.S.-approved Afghans, however, are still sheltering in place, awaiting instruction for when it is safe to come to the airport. Over the weekend, the State Department issued a warning to U.S. citizens, telling them not to approach the airport unless expressly notified by a U.S. government official.
Last week, the Biden administration estimated there were up to 15,000 Americans remaining in Afghanistan. Officials said Saturday that about 2,500 had left the country.

U.S. officials are in contact with Taliban leaders to try to negotiate assurances of peaceful passage to the airport. But as Blinken noted during a television appearance Sunday, the Taliban “are in control of Kabul. That is the reality.”
U.S. lawmakers and Biden administration officials gave an update on the withdrawal of Americans and allies from Afghanistan on Aug. 22. (Mahlia Posey/The Washington Post)
The Taliban’s leaders are presently in Kabul, discussing how to form a government. On Sunday, a senior member of the Taliban’s ruling council said that although the militant group would respect an amnesty for Afghan citizens, including those who cooperated with the United States, it would not apply to “troublemakers” or those “who are creating law and order situations.”

The State Department’s warning also was motivated in part by threats that the Islamic State might be targeting Americans.
“The threat is real. It’s acute. It is persistent. And it is something we’re focused on with every tool in our arsenal,” Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, said Sunday on CNN. During remarks later in the day, the president added that “we’re under no illusions” about the severity of the threat posed by the Islamic State.
The Islamic State has long been at odds with the Taliban. But the Taliban remains aligned with al-Qaeda, the group behind the 9/11 terrorist attacks that prompted the United States to invade Afghanistan 20 years ago. Blinken acknowledged during an interview on Fox News that remnants of al-Qaeda remain in Afghanistan, though he insisted that the group’s capacity to launch a similar attack on the U.S. homeland “is vastly, vastly diminished.”

Neither Blinken nor Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, who appeared Sunday on ABC News, would say whether U.S. forces would be allowed to go beyond the narrow perimeter of the Kabul airport — or whether they thought Biden should extend the Aug. 31 deadline for U.S. forces to leave Afghanistan, to ensure that the maximum number of American citizens and Afghans eligible for U.S. entry are evacuated. The president indicated that such conversations are underway within the administration but that he remains hopeful it won’t be necessary to stay there any longer.
Amy B Wang, Haq Nawaz Khan, Paul Kane and Matt Viser contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....

August 23, 20214:02 AM PDT
Last Updated 43 minutes ago
World
Analysis: China, Pakistan, India jockey for position in Afghanistan's new Great Game

By Sanjeev Miglani and Asif Shahzad, Yew Lun Tian

5 minute read

Aug 23 (Reuters) - The Russian and British empires battled over Afghanistan in the 19th century, and the United States and the Soviet Union in the 20th. As the Taliban takes over in the strategic, landlocked nation, the new Great Game has Pakistan in control, with its ally China looking to cement its grip on the region.

Pakistan has deep ties with the Taliban and has been accused of supporting the Islamist group as it battled the U.S.-backed government in Kabul - charges denied by Islamabad. When the Taliban captured Kabul last week, Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan said Afghans had broken the "shackles of slavery".

As the Taliban holds discussions to decide on its government model, media reports have said some Pakistani officials are involved.

A Foreign Office spokesperson in Islamabad said Pakistan wanted an inclusive political settlement in Afghanistan that ensured peace and stability in the region but added the "key role remains with the Afghans".


China, with no previous involvement in Afghanistan but a strong alliance with Pakistan, has held out an olive branch to the Taliban, enticed by the country's mineral wealth, including its large reserves of lithium, a key component for electric vehicles. China is also looking at the prospect of extra security for its narrow land route through the Karakoram mountains into Pakistan.

And then there is India - Pakistan's old enemy, which has been locked in a military standoff with China along their disputed border for more than a year. India was a key supporter of the ousted regime in Kabul and as both Pakistan and China become key players in a Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, New Delhi's nervousness in increasing.

China however says its main aim in reaching out to the Taliban is to protect its western Xinjiang region from anti-Beijing East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM) militants, who could seek sanctuary within Afghanistan.

"While Pakistan might be thinking of leveraging on Afghanistan against India, this is not necessarily the case for China," said Zhang Li, a professor of South Asian studies at Sichuan University.


"China's primary concern now is for the Taliban to ... build an inclusive and moderate regime so that terrorism would not spill over to Xinjiang and the region. Any other calculus further to that remains to be seen."

The U.S. government says ETIM no longer exists as a formal organization and is instead a broad label China uses to oppress a variety of Muslim ethnic groups, including Uyghurs, in its Xinjiang region. China denies all accusations of abuse.

China has dangled the prospect of providing the two things the Taliban needs to govern Afghanistan: diplomatic recognition and much-needed infrastructure and economic assistance, said Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi.

"An opportunistic China is certain to exploit the new opening to make strategic inroads into mineral-rich Afghanistan and deepen its penetration of Pakistan, Iran, and Central Asia," he said.


BITTER MEMORIES

There was much cheering in Pakistan over India's discomfiture at the turn of events, said Raza Ahmad Rumi, a political commentator, who teaches at Ithaca College in New York. The two countries have fought three wars since they became independent nations when the subcontinent was divided in 1947.

"The jubilation in Pakistan witnessed on social media and TV screens was largely linked to the undoing of Indian influence as conventional policy circles viewed (Afghan President Ashraf) Ghani's close links with India as a threat," Rumi said.

India has bitter memories of the previous Taliban stint in power from 1996 to 2001 and the group's links to Pakistan.


An Indian Airlines plane was hijacked in 1999 and ultimately landed in Kandahar in southern Afghanistan. New Delhi freed three senior Pakistani militants in its jails in exchange for the return of the passengers and the Taliban allowed the hijackers and the released prisoners to go to Pakistan.

"Our position today is one of adjusting to reality. We have to play the long game in Afghanistan. We don't have a contiguous border but we have stakes there," said Jayant Prasad, a former Indian ambassador to Kabul.

Over the past year as the Taliban emerged as a dominant force and U.S.-brokered negotiations began in Doha, Indian diplomats had opened a line with the group, diplomatic sources in New Delhi said.

"We are talking to all stakeholders," one of them said, but did not want to get to the specifics of the discussions. There has been criticism at home that India put all its eggs in the basket of the Ghani government when the United States itself had begun talks with the Taliban, and that New Delhi left it too late.


'NOT A RE-RUN'

Still, India as a major economic player can be attractive to the Taliban, looking to avoid an over-dependence on China, the source said.

India has development projects in every one of Afghanistan's 34 provinces, small and big, including the parliament building in Kabul that it built, which was over-run by gun-toting Taliban men after sweeping into the city last week.

Myra MacDonald, author of three books on South Asia and a former Reuters journalist, said while the Taliban takeover was a setback for India, it was not game over for New Delhi.


"This is not a re-run of the past. Everyone is going to be much more careful this time about letting Islamist terrorism in Afghanistan explode as in the pre-9/11 days."

"Plus in relative terms, India is much more economically stronger than Pakistan this time around."

A senior member of the Taliban has told Reuters that impoverished Afghanistan needs help from countries in the region, including Iran, as well as the United States and Russia.

"We expect them to help us, to support our people, especially the health sector and especially the business sector and mining sector," said Waheedullah Hashimi, who has access to the group's decision-making.


"Our job is to convince them to accept us."

Additional reporting by Gibran Peshiman; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan
 

EMICT

Veteran Member
Bush Era NSA Head Says Its A "Good Idea" To Send Unvaxx'd Trump Supporters To Afghanistan

MONDAY, AUG 23, 2021 - 08:05 AM
Authored by Steve Watson via Summit News,

Former head of the NSA and the CIA during the George W. Bush presidency, General Michael Hayden, declared that he thinks it would be a “good idea” to send unvaccinated supporters of President Trump to die in Afghanistan.



Hayden, who infamously declared that the Fourth Amendment “changed” on September 11, 2001, and went on to oversee mass surveillance of Americans at the NSA while the invasion of Afghanistan was implemented, made the comments on Twitter.

Hayden responded to a post stating “Can we send the MAGA wearing unvaxxed to Afghanistan, no use sending that plane back empty?”

Hayden also retweeted a picture labelling Trump ‘MAGA’ supporters as ‘Our Taliban’:

View: https://twitter.com/SShebop/status/1428554846651785216?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1428554846651785216%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Fpolitical%2Fbush-era-nsa-head-says-its-good-idea-send-unvaxxd-trump-supporters-afghanistan


View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1008035777455026178


Hayden has previously compared Trump’s border policy to Nazi death camps:

Meanwhile, the current generals at the Pentagon admitted at the weekend via Press Secretary John Kirby that they are “not familiar” with US Embassy advice that American citizens should not travel to the Kabul airport at this time, despite it being widely reported in the media.

Kirby also admitted that the Pentagon doesn’t know how many Americans are trapped in the country.

* * *
 

jward

passin' thru
Parisa Hafezi
@PHREUTERS

4h

BREAKING: The Taliban will not extend an Aug. 31 deadline for Western forces to leave Afghanistan, two sources in the Islamist group told
@Reuters
on Monday. The sources, however, said no Western government or official had approached the Taliban to extend the deadline.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Bush Era NSA Head Says Its A "Good Idea" To Send Unvaxx'd Trump Supporters To Afghanistan

MONDAY, AUG 23, 2021 - 08:05 AM
Authored by Steve Watson via Summit News,

Former head of the NSA and the CIA during the George W. Bush presidency, General Michael Hayden, declared that he thinks it would be a “good idea” to send unvaccinated supporters of President Trump to die in Afghanistan.



Hayden, who infamously declared that the Fourth Amendment “changed” on September 11, 2001, and went on to oversee mass surveillance of Americans at the NSA while the invasion of Afghanistan was implemented, made the comments on Twitter.

Hayden responded to a post stating “Can we send the MAGA wearing unvaxxed to Afghanistan, no use sending that plane back empty?”

Hayden also retweeted a picture labelling Trump ‘MAGA’ supporters as ‘Our Taliban’:

View: https://twitter.com/SShebop/status/1428554846651785216?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1428554846651785216%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Fpolitical%2Fbush-era-nsa-head-says-its-good-idea-send-unvaxxd-trump-supporters-afghanistan


View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1008035777455026178


Hayden has previously compared Trump’s border policy to Nazi death camps:

Meanwhile, the current generals at the Pentagon admitted at the weekend via Press Secretary John Kirby that they are “not familiar” with US Embassy advice that American citizens should not travel to the Kabul airport at this time, despite it being widely reported in the media.

Kirby also admitted that the Pentagon doesn’t know how many Americans are trapped in the country.

* * *

Vise'.....
 

jward

passin' thru
:shk:
Arthur Schwartz
@ArthurSchwartz

Blinken: Leaving Americans to get to the Kabul airport on their own is “the best way to do this.”
View: https://twitter.com/nedryun/status/1429499079550291980?s=20


+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++





De Faakto Intelligence Research Observatory
@faakto


US special operations forces race to save former Afghan comrades in jeopardy - ABC News
View: https://twitter.com/faakto/status/1429535178750251008?s=20
 

jward

passin' thru
: (

Kylie Atwoo
@ylieatwood

2h

During a recent 24 hour period 28 U.S. military flights evacuated about 10,400 people from Kabul, per a White House official. That’s the highest number in a 24 hour period yet, and it’s a figure beyond what the pentagon said was its capacity of 5-9K people a day.
++++++++++++++++++






Deborah Haynes
@haynesdeborah

5h

UK Armed Forces minister @JSHeappey makes clear once the US leaves Afghanistan, the UK & its evacuation also has to stop: "The die is cast the US Air Force is operating Kabul airport... When the US go, the mission has to come to an end," he tells
@BBCr4today
 

jward

passin' thru

Sierra Alpha
@skywatcherintel

22m

Quite a worrying situation in Kabul this afternoon. The US and its allies have conceded that the evacuation will not be complete by August 31st, the Taliban has also said that an extension beyond that date would not be given.
 

jward

passin' thru

Reuters
@Reuters

6m

U.S. military evacuated more than 10,000 people from Kabul on Sunday http://reut.rs/3D7dK3M
Image
View: https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1429796823888244740?s=20

__________________________________________


ABC News
@ABC

1h

LATEST: In a 24-hour period from Sunday to Monday, 28 U.S. military flights evacuated approximately 10,400 people from Kabul. Another 5,900 people were evacuated via 61 coalition aircraft. https://abcn.ws/3sNashu
View: https://twitter.com/ABC/status/1429777216863416320?s=20
 
Last edited:

jward

passin' thru




Reuters
@Reuters

23m

Facing increasing pressure to pick up the pace of evacuations, President Joe Biden said the security situation in Afghanistan was changing rapidly and his administration was responding as quickly as possible https://reut.rs/3j59UAe
View: https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1429793042421141504?s=20


+++++++++++





ABC News
@ABC

28m

CHAOS IN KABUL: Turkish soldiers hand out water and food in blistering heat as thousands of Afghan families wait in line as the race to evacuate at Kabul airport continues. https://abcn.ws/3y4huiQ
View: https://twitter.com/ABC/status/1429791794003382273?s=20


___________________

Reuters
@Reuters

36m

Germany looking at evacuations from Afghanistan after Kabul airport closes http://reut.rs/384Qntc
View: https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1429790545912680452?s=20
 

Cacheman

Ultra MAGA!
Bush Era NSA Head Says Its A "Good Idea" To Send Unvaxx'd Trump Supporters To Afghanistan

MONDAY, AUG 23, 2021 - 08:05 AM
Authored by Steve Watson via Summit News,

Former head of the NSA and the CIA during the George W. Bush presidency, General Michael Hayden, declared that he thinks it would be a “good idea” to send unvaccinated supporters of President Trump to die in Afghanistan.



Hayden, who infamously declared that the Fourth Amendment “changed” on September 11, 2001, and went on to oversee mass surveillance of Americans at the NSA while the invasion of Afghanistan was implemented, made the comments on Twitter.

Hayden responded to a post stating “Can we send the MAGA wearing unvaxxed to Afghanistan, no use sending that plane back empty?”

Hayden also retweeted a picture labelling Trump ‘MAGA’ supporters as ‘Our Taliban’:

View: https://twitter.com/SShebop/status/1428554846651785216?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1428554846651785216%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Fpolitical%2Fbush-era-nsa-head-says-its-good-idea-send-unvaxxd-trump-supporters-afghanistan


View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1008035777455026178


Hayden has previously compared Trump’s border policy to Nazi death camps:

Meanwhile, the current generals at the Pentagon admitted at the weekend via Press Secretary John Kirby that they are “not familiar” with US Embassy advice that American citizens should not travel to the Kabul airport at this time, despite it being widely reported in the media.

Kirby also admitted that the Pentagon doesn’t know how many Americans are trapped in the country.

* * *
That only touches the surface


americanthinker.com

If you want to know how much the Deep State hates you...
By Andrea Widburg

5-6 minutes

We Americans focus tightly on our federal elected officials. We become fanatical about our presidential candidates and scrutinize closely our senators and House members. But when it comes to the agencies that really run the government, the best we can do is contact our senators about the officials who need Senate approval. We have no say at all over the vast army of unnamed employees. Trump's presidency, though, revealed how powerful these unelected people are...and how much they hate us. Exhibit A for today is General Michael Hayden, former director of the NSA and director of the CIA — under George W. Bush.

Hayden's Twitter feed reveals how very deeply and profoundly this former military officer and government official hates that half (or more than half) of America that voted for Trump. He shows the same animosity we saw with Peter Strzok when he wrote his married girlfriend that he could "smell" the Trump supporters at Walmart.

Here are some examples of what you'll find on his feed. For one thing, if you don't want to take a vaccine that even the MSM is conceding is potentially dangerous, he wants you out of the country and, preferably, dead:

View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1429436196149661696?s=20




He thinks it's a wonderful idea to flood America's communities with young Afghan men:

View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1429224271117750272?s=20


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As a reminder, young Afghan men were responsible for the majority of the huge number of sex crimes in Germany and Austria after Angela Merkel invited them into Europe. But Hayden, who probably lives in a leafy enclave safe from poorer neighborhoods, thinks it would be great for them to live in your neighborhood.

And there's that Trump-hatred:

View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1425805615650246656?s=20


View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1428487886643605505?s=20


Think about it: General Hayden is saying it's an "a------" idea to protect civilians and equipment before you pull out the military (without even bothering to notify your allies). I'd expect more from someone with a prior military background.
And while Hayden is still obsessed with hating on Trump, he doesn't have a bad word to say about Biden, the architect of the unfolding disaster in Afghanistan.

When J.D. Vance, who is running for Congress, said Americans should come first, Hayden essentially cursed his congressional chances:

View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1428485695216173062?s=20




He reads race into South Carolina's governor signing into law the new "Open Carry with Training Act":

View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1426591475496796169?s=20


View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1426592519945588736?s=20


What in the world does race have to do with this?

And of course, Hayden calls Tucker Carlson a Nazi:

View: https://twitter.com/GenMhayden/status/1425912959965011976?s=20


But here's the thing about Hayden: this guy is not a Democrat. He considers himself a standard-bearer of true Republicanism. He is the perfect reminder that there is a monoparty in Washington, D.C., one that ranges politically from slightly left to far left. Trump challenged that establishment, and the establishment tried to destroy him — and, with January 6 as the weapon, is trying to destroy Trump's supporters, too.

Congress has pretty much abandoned most of its lawmaking functions. After it's picked Americans' pockets by demanding hugely high taxes to fund leftist projects and local boondoggles, it hands the real law-making responsibilities to the various agencies. In addition, agencies such as the DOJ, FBI, CIA, and NSA have extraordinary power over American lives. (E.g., the NSA just admitted to unmasking Tucker Carlson or the DOJ/FBI witch hunt for people who "paraded" on January 6.)

Congress, which we elect, is doing a lousy job looking out for our interests by passing the buck to people who, whether they're Democrat or Republican, hate traditional, core American values. Hayden thinks a congressional candidate who believes in putting his own countrymen first should lose in favor of...another Tlaib? AOC? Omar? All these people would happily kick Americans to the curb.

Next year, during the primaries, make sure you let candidates know that one of the things that's important to you is getting rid of Deep Staters who despise the American people and American values. It's time to make it clear that, under the American constitutional system, we don't work for them; they are civil servants who work for us.
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Image: Andrea Widburg using a public domain photo.
 

jward

passin' thru
‘Chaos Is What Is In Control’: Pete Hegseth Says Taliban Knows More About Americans Trapped In Afghanistan Than US Officials

Pete Hegseth appears on The Faulkner Focus Screenshot/Fox News



Kevin Harness Contributor
August 23, 2021 2:52 PM ET


Former National Guard officer Pete Hegseth claimed that the Taliban knew more about American troops trapped in Afghanistan than U.S. officials.

Hegseth joined host Harris Faulkner on Monday’s broadcast of “The Faulkner Focus” to discuss a briefing from the Pentagon detailing the most recent developments in Afghanistan. (RELATED: Pentagon Won’t Say How Many Americans Evacuated From Afghanistan)

“When you are deliberately vague with the numbers of Americans on the ground behind enemy lines, what does that communicate to you?” Faulkner asked.

“It communicates to me in all fairness they don’t know. The chaos is what’s in control right now there,” Hegseth responded. “It’s more likely that the Taliban has a better sense of how many Americans, how many SIV applicants are on the ground.”

Special Immigrant Visas (SIVs) are authorized by the Defense Department and they are given to foreign nationals, like the Afghan interpreters who have aided the Americans, in order to assist them in coming to the U.S.

Hegseth added that the Taliban had control of all the roads and checkpoints and that the United States was being forced to rely on their word that they were allowing people through if they had the proper identification.


Hegseth concluded by saying that countless numbers of U.S. citizens have been approved. During the briefing, he was getting several texts from an interpreter who was on his sixth attempt of trying to get into the airport. “He’s 300 meters away fighting through the crowd, fighting through checkpoints with the proper paperwork to get there. That’s what’s happening in real-time right now, so it’s hard to believe that the Pentagon has a true sense and could narrow it down in four to five days of exactly who needs to go and get them out in time.”
View: https://twitter.com/DailyCaller/status/1429907549474656259?s=20
 
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