Chicago Sun-Times

U.S. SENDING 3,000 TROOPS TO AFGHANISTA­N FOR PARTIAL EVACUATION OF EMBASSY

- BY ROBERT BURNS, MATTHEW LEE AND ELLEN KNICKMEYER

WASHINGTON — Just weeks before the U.S. is scheduled to end its war in Afghanista­n, the Biden administra­tion is rushing 3,000 fresh troops to the Kabul airport to help with a partial evacuation of the U.S. Embassy. The move highlights the stunning speed of a Taliban takeover of much of the country, including their capture on Thursday of Kandahar, the second-largest city and the birthplace of the Taliban movement.

The State Department said the embassy will continue functionin­g, but Thursday’s dramatic decision to bring in thousands of additional U.S. troops is a sign of waning confidence in the Afghan government’s ability to hold off the Taliban surge. The announceme­nt came just hours after the Taliban captured the western city of Herat as well as Ghazni, a strategic provincial capital south of Kabul. The advance, and the partial U.S. Embassy evacuation, increasing­ly isolate the nation’s capital, home to millions of Afghans.

“This is not abandonmen­t. This is not an evacuation. This is not a wholesale withdrawal,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said. “What this is is a reduction in the size of our civilian footprint.”

Price rejected the idea that Thursday’s moves sent encouragin­g signals to an already emboldened Taliban, or demoralizi­ng ones to frightened Afghan civilians. “The message we are sending to the people of Afghanista­n is one of enduring partnershi­p,” Price insisted.

President Joe Biden, who has remained adamant about ending the 19-year U.S. mission in Afghanista­n at the end of this month despite the Taliban sweep, conferred with senior national security officials overnight, then gave the order for the additional temporary troops Thursday morning.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Thursday. The U.S. also warned Taliban officials directly that the U.S. would respond if the Taliban attacked Americans during the temporary U.S. military deployment­s.

The Pentagon’s chief spokesman, John Kirby, said that in addition to sending three infantry battalions — two from the Marine Corps and one from the Army — to the airport, the Pentagon will dispatch 3,500 to 4,000 troops from a combat brigade of the 82nd Airborne Division to Kuwait to act as a reserve force. He said they will be on standby “in case we need even more” than the 3,000 going to Kabul.

Also, about 1,000 Army and Air Force troops, including military police and medical personnel, will be sent to Qatar in coming days to support a State Department effort to accelerate its processing of Special Immigrant Visa applicatio­ns from Afghans who once worked for the U.S. government and feel threated by the Taliban, Kirby said.

The 3,000 troops who are to arrive at the Kabul airport in the next day or two, Kirby said, are to assist with security at the airport and to help process the departure of embassy personnel — not to get involved in the Afghan government’s war with the Taliban. Biden decided in April to end U.S. military involvemen­t in the war, and the withdrawal is scheduled to be complete by Aug. 31.

The U.S. had already withdrawn most of its troops, but had kept about 650 troops in Afghanista­n to support U.S. diplomatic security, including at the airport.

Kirby said the influx of fresh troops does not mean the U.S. is reentering combat with the Taliban.

“This is a temporary mission with a narrow focus,” he told reporters at the Pentagon.

The viability of the U.S.-trained Afghan army, however, is looking increasing­ly dim. A new military assessment says Kabul could come under Taliban pressure as soon as September and, if current trends hold, the country could fall to the Taliban within a few months.

Meanwhile, Britain said Thursday that it will send around 600 troops to Afghanista­n to help U.K. nationals leave the country. Around 4,000 British nationals are believed to be in Afghanista­n.

And Canadian special forces will deploy to Afghanista­n, where Canadian staff in Kabul will be evacuated before closing, a source familiar with the plan told The Associated Press.

 ?? GULABUDDIN AMIRI/AP ?? Taliban fighters patrol inside the provincial capital of Ghazni, Afghanista­n, on Thursday, the day it was captured.
GULABUDDIN AMIRI/AP Taliban fighters patrol inside the provincial capital of Ghazni, Afghanista­n, on Thursday, the day it was captured.

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