The Columbus Dispatch

Hospitals warn of respirator­y illnesses for kids

- Jessie Balmert

Doctors at Ohio’s children’s hospitals sounded the alarm Monday about a rise in respirator­y illnesses: both COVID-19 and the respirator­y syncytial virus or RSV.

“Nobody wants to be an alarmist,” said Dr. Patty Manning-courtney, chief of staff at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. “But I also feel it’s my responsibi­lity to share the trends that we’re seeing and to ask for help when we need it.”

projection­s for the first time. The count was more than twice the 3,900 flown out in the previous 24 hours on U.S. military planes.

Army Gen. Stephen Lyons, head of U.S. Transporta­tion Command, which manages the military aircraft that are executing the Kabul airlift, told a Pentagon news conference that more than 200 planes are involved, including aerial refueling planes, and that air crews are working round the clock to accelerate the evacuation.

“They’re tired,” Lyons said of the crews. “They’re probably exhausted in some cases.”

The Pentagon said it has added a fourth U.S. military base, in New Jersey, to three others – in Virginia, Texas and Wisconsin – that are prepared to temporaril­y house arriving Afghans.

Maj. Gen. Hank Williams, the Joint Staff deputy director for regional operations, told reporters there are now about 1,200 Afghans at those military bases. The four bases combined are capable of housing up to 25,000 evacuees, Kirby said.

Biden said Sunday he would not rule out extending the evacuation beyond Aug. 31, the date he had set for completing the withdrawal of troops and formally ending the nearly 20-year U.S. military role in Afghanista­n.

And British Prime Minister Boris Johnson plans to press Biden for an extension to get out the maximum number of foreigners and Afghan allies possible. Biden is to face the U.S.’S G-7 allies in a virtual summit on Afghanista­n Tuesday.

But Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen, in an interview with Sky News, said that Aug. 31 is a “red line” the U.S. must not cross and that extending the American presence would “provoke a reaction.”

Since the Taliban seized the capital Aug. 15, completing a stunning rout of the U.s.-backed Afghan government and military, the U.S. has been carrying out the evacuation in coordinati­on with the Taliban, who have held off on attacking under a 2020 withdrawal deal with the Trump administra­tion.

Monday’s warning signaled the Taliban could insist on shutting down the airlifts out of the Kabul airport in just over a week. Lawmakers, refugee groups, veterans’ organizati­ons and U.S. allies have said ending the evacuation then could strand countless Afghans and foreigners still hoping for flights out.

In remarks at the White House on Sunday, one week after the Taliban completed their victory by capturing Kabul, Biden defended his decision to end the war and insisted that getting all Americans out of the country would have been difficult in the best of circumstan­ces at any other time.

Critics have said Biden waited too long to begin organizing an evacuation, which then became captive to the fear and panic set off by the government’s sudden collapse.

Biden said Sunday military discussion­s are underway on potentiall­y extending the airlift beyond Aug. 31. “Our

“We are in talks with the Taliban on a daily basis through both political and security channels.”

Jake Sullivan President Joe Biden’s national security adviser

hope is we will not have to extend, but there are discussion­s,” he said, suggesting the possibilit­y that the Taliban will be consulted.

Since Aug. 14, the U.S. has evacuated and facilitate­d the evacuation of about 37,000 people. The U.S. military says it has the capacity to fly between 5,000 and 9,000 people out per day.

Biden also asserted, without a full explanatio­n, that U.S. forces have managed to improve access to the airport for Americans and others seeking to get on flights. He suggested that the perimeter had been extended, widening a “safe zone.”

But a firefight just outside the airport killed at least one Afghan soldier early Monday, German officials said.

It was the latest in days of often-lethal turmoil outside the airport. People coming in hopes of escaping Taliban rule face sporadic gunfire, beatings by the Taliban, and crowds that have trampled many.

Michigan Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin, a former U.S. intelligen­ce official and one of many lawmakers working with Americans and Afghans scrambling to evacuate family and colleagues, urged U.S. forces in a series of tweets Monday to keep the airport gates open and approachab­le.

The current set-up was leaving Afghans to seek “every connection they can muster” to get through the gates, a process that seemed to be disadvanta­ging Afghan women, Slotkin said.

Biden and his top aides have repeatedly cited their concern that extremist groups in Afghanista­n will attempt to exploit the chaos around the Kabul airport.

The Biden administra­tion has given no firm estimate of the number of Americans seeking to leave Afghanista­n. Some have put the total between 10,000 and 15.000.

Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani, Lolita C. Baldor, Ellen Knickmeyer, Hope Yen, Alexandra Jaffe, Jonathan Lemire and Matthew Lee contribute­d to this report.

 ?? SENIOR AIRMAN TAYLOR CRUL/U.S. AIR FORCE VIA AP ?? A U.S. Air Force loadmaster guides evacuees aboard a U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaste­r III aircraft in Kabul, Afghanista­n on Saturday. The U.S. has so far ferried thousands of people to safety.
SENIOR AIRMAN TAYLOR CRUL/U.S. AIR FORCE VIA AP A U.S. Air Force loadmaster guides evacuees aboard a U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaste­r III aircraft in Kabul, Afghanista­n on Saturday. The U.S. has so far ferried thousands of people to safety.
 ?? BALCE CENETA/AP MANUEL ?? U.S. Army Maj. Gen. William Taylor, Joint Staff Operations, speaks about the situation in Afghanista­n during a briefing at the Pentagon on Monday.
BALCE CENETA/AP MANUEL U.S. Army Maj. Gen. William Taylor, Joint Staff Operations, speaks about the situation in Afghanista­n during a briefing at the Pentagon on Monday.

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