Hartford Courant

Rescue effort pushes ahead

Blumenthal racing to clear charter flights for Americans, allies

- By Christophe­r Keating

HARTFORD — U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal stepped up his efforts Thursday to clear two charter flights trying to leave northern Afghanista­n with American citizens and their Afghan allies on board.

Delicate negotiatio­ns have been underway the last 10 days as Blumenthal has been trying to help passengers who have been waiting for days at the internatio­nal airport in Mazar-e Sharif, the country’s fourth-largest city.

Others hoping to leave are in hiding and would head to the airport at the last minute if the chartered flights are cleared to leave, Blumenthal said.

The Taliban has said publicly that some passengers do not have the proper paperwork to leave.

“We’re continuing to press the State Department to pressure the Taliban,’’ Blumenthal, D-connecticu­t, said Thursday. “The planes that we have in Mazar-esharif may have to fly to Kabul before they leave because they are not allowing internatio­nal flights from Mazar-e-sharif. We’re working hard on it now.”

Those efforts were continuing as a separate, unrelated flight departed Kabul on Thursday in the first major evacuation since American military forces left the country at the end of August. About 200 passengers were headed to Doha, Qatar after an agreement was reached with the Taliban, which now controls the airports.

“Certainly, the departure of any group of threatened Americans or others [on the other flight] is a good and positive step, but there is no cause at this point for a victory lap or mission accomplish­ed sign,” Blumenthal said. “There is still work to be done.’’

With the U.S. embassy closed and no American officials on the ground in Afghanista­n to facili

tate the departure, the effort to clear the Mazar-e Sharif flights has been delayed for more than a week.

Blumenthal said he was able to speak publicly because the Taliban is already aware of the effort, but he was asked to withhold certain informatio­n, such as the names of the relief organizati­ons involved, due to the sensitivit­y of the situation.

He and his staff have been working with a coalition that

includes top officials at the State Department, ambassador­s, and several relief agencies. Blumenthal said he had hoped that the planes would have left days ago.

“This situation is a humanitari­an nightmare,’’ Blumenthal said in an interview. “Many of them are terrified and in hiding. They deserve to leave the country now.’’

The situation has become more complicate­d because Americans, who essentiall­y controlled Kabul and other key areas during the 20-year war in Afghanista­n, are no longer in charge as the

private effort to evacuate Americans and their Afghan allies continues.

“There are no government planes involved,’’ Blumenthal said. “There are no military on the ground. There is no State Department to supervise. It’s a completely private effort — funded and operated by humanitari­an groups and relief organizati­ons. It’s a very important coalition. … This effort is to fill a gap left by the U.S. withdrawal. The U.S. government has no boots on the ground to verify these passengers.’’

He added, “The planes are

ready to go. We’ve checked all the boxes, and unfortunat­ely, we’ve lost valuable time.’’

The latest efforts are being made after more than 120,000 people were evacuated from the Kabul internatio­nal airport in the chaotic final days after the Taliban seized power. A suicide bombing in the last days killed 13 American soldiers and 169 Afghans at the airport as thousands tried to flee the country.

 ??  ?? Blumenthal
Blumenthal
 ?? BERNAT ARMANGUE/AP ?? Taliban personnel stand near a plane at the airport in Kabul, where some 200 foreigners, including Americans, flew out of Afghanista­n on an internatio­nal commercial flight on Thursday.
BERNAT ARMANGUE/AP Taliban personnel stand near a plane at the airport in Kabul, where some 200 foreigners, including Americans, flew out of Afghanista­n on an internatio­nal commercial flight on Thursday.

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