Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

US President Joe Biden DPA/PA Images
Afghanistan

US 'on pace' to complete Afghan pullout by 31 August, Biden tells G7 leaders

United States President Joe Biden has faced calls from all corners to extend the evacuation window.

LAST UPDATE | Aug 24th 2021, 10:43 PM

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN has told G7 leaders the United States was “on pace” to complete its pullout from Afghanistan by 31 August but contingency plans were being drawn up in case the self-imposed deadline could not be met.

The White House said Biden also told Group of Seven leaders in a conference call that completing the US troop withdrawal from Afghanistan by the end of the month depends on “continued coordination” with the Taliban and access for evacuees to Kabul airport.

The United States has evacuated around 58,000 people, including more than 4,000 Americans, from Afghanistan since 14 August, the day before the Taliban entered Kabul and took power, according to US officials.

Several thousand other people have been evacuated by allied European nations such as Germany and the United Kingdom.

The Taliban urged skilled Afghans not to flee the country today and warned the United States and its NATO allies they would not accept an extension to the evacuation deadline.

A spokesman for the hardline Islamist group told America to stop taking “Afghan experts,” such as engineers and doctors, out of the country.

“This country needs their expertise. They should not be taken to other countries,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told a press conference in the capital.

“They should not encourage the Afghan people to flee Afghanistan.”

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Biden had told G7 leaders the US mission in Kabul “will end based on the achievement of our objectives”.

“He confirmed we are currently on pace to finish by 31 August,” Psaki told reporters.

“He also made clear that with each day of operations on the ground, we have added risk to our troops with increasing threats from ISIS-K,” she said, adding that “completion of the mission by 31 August depends on continued coordination with the Taliban, including continued access for evacuees to the airport.”

“The president has asked the Pentagon and the State Department for contingency plans to adjust the timeline should that become necessary,” the White House spokeswoman said.

European nations have said they would not be able to airlift all at-risk Afghans before the 31 August cut-off, and Biden has faced calls from all corners to extend the evacuation window.

‘It will not be enough’

Mujahid, the Taliban spokesman, said the Islamist group opposes an extension.

“They have planes, they have the airport, they should get their citizens and contractors out of here,” he said.

US-led troops have ramped up operations to get thousands of people out of Kabul by 31 August – the deadline set by the US before the fall of the capital for all foreign troops to have pulled out.

Germany said today Western allies simply cannot fly out every Afghan who needs protection before the cut-off date.

“Even if (the evacuation) goes on until 31 August or even a few days longer, it will not be enough,” Foreign Minister Heiko Maas told Bild TV.

Earlier, France said it would have to end evacuations from Kabul’s airport on Thursday if the United States stuck to the deadline, and Spain said it would not be able to rescue all Afghans who served Spanish missions.

EU leaders at the G7 meeting urged Biden to continue to secure Kabul airport until operations to evacuate vulnerable Afghans are complete. 

Many Afghans fear a repeat of the brutal interpretation of Islamic law that the Taliban implemented when first in power from 1996-2001, or retribution for working with the US-backed government over the past two decades.

Today, Mujahid said female Afghan government workers should stay home until security conditions in the country improve.

Dozens of Afghan schoolgirls, faculty and staff at the war-torn country’s only boarding school for girls – the privately run School of Leadership, Afghanistan – will be evacuated to Rwanda, the institution’s founder Shabana Basij-Rasikh said.

Days earlier, Basij-Rasikh said she was burning her students’ educational records, in an effort “to protect them and their families”.

Australia also has evacuated dozens of sportswomen and athletes under threat in the country, with Khalida Popal, the former national football team captain, saying some had been beaten as they fled.

afghanistan-kabul-taliban-press-conference Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid Xinhua News Agency / PA Images Xinhua News Agency / PA Images / PA Images

Irish evacuations

Members of Ireland’s elite Army Ranger Wing are being sent to Kabul, where they will assist in the evacuation of the last remaining Irish citizens there.

A group of soldiers, along with at least two high-ranking officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs, are heading to Afghanistan. It is expected that the members of the Defence Forces will be on the ground in Kabul by Thursday.

Speaking to Newstalk Breakfast this morning, the Foreign Affairs Minister said this is a “short targeted deployment” to give “extra access on the ground in terms of trying to get people who are desperate to leave Afghanistan out”. 

He said the situation is “not without risk” but “on balance, this is the right thing to do”. 

All but one of the single Irish citizens working for NGOs and organisations in Afghanistan have now left the country. 

24 Irish citizens and 12 non-Irish family members remain. Coveney said these are predominantly Afghan-Irish people which can delay their exit as they are organising to leave in families and they are Afghan as well as Irish so it’s “more difficult in many ways to get them through the crowd and get them into the airport”. 

“We have places on planes for all of these 36 people, we certainly think we have anyways,” the minister said, adding that the “real challenge” is reaching Kabul airport. 

“Getting actually into the airport, through the Taliban checks and then, which is the most difficult thing, through large crowds and a lot of crushing and a lot of tempers flaring and so on in large crowds around the perimeter of the airport because, of course, lots and lots of people want to get in.” 

Secret meeting

The Taliban achieved their stunning victory after Biden pulled out nearly all American troops from Afghanistan, following through on a deal struck with the movement by former president Donald Trump.

However, Biden was forced to redeploy thousands of troops after the fall of Kabul to oversee the airlift.

According to The Washington Post, US Central Intelligence Agency chief William Burns held a secret meeting in Kabul yesterday with Taliban co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, although no details were reported and neither the CIA nor the Taliban confirmed it.

The rush to leave Kabul has sparked harrowing scenes and left at least eight people dead.

Some have been crushed to death, and at least one, a youth football player, died after falling off a plane.

The Taliban have repeatedly claimed to be different from their 1990s incarnation, and have declared an amnesty for government forces and officials.

But an intelligence assessment conducted for the United Nations said militants were going door-to-door hunting former government officials and those who worked with US and NATO forces.

In the capital and other cities, the former insurgents have enforced some sense of calm, with their fighters patrolling the streets and manning checkpoints.

© – AFP, 2021 with reporting by Orla Dwyer

Your Voice
Readers Comments
53
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

    Leave a commentcancel