The Oklahoman

Afghanista­n: Biden officials say US has capacity to evacuate 300 Americans.

Effort continues as new security alert issued

- Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON – The United States has the capacity to evacuate the approximat­ely 300 U.S. citizens remaining in Afghanista­n who want to leave before President Joe Biden’s Tuesday deadline, senior Biden administra­tion officials said Sunday, as another U.S. drone strike against suspected Islamic State militants underscore­d the grave threat in the war’s final days.

“This is the most dangerous time in an already extraordin­arily dangerous mission these last couple of days,” America’s top diplomat, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, said not long before confirmation of that airstrike in Kabul, the capital.

The evacuation flow of Americans kept pace even as a new State Department security alert, issued hours before the military action, instructed people to leave the airport area immediatel­y “due to a specific, credible threat.”

Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan said that for those U.S. citizens seeking immediatel­y to leave Afghanista­n by the looming deadline, “we have the capacity to have 300 Americans, which is roughly the number we think are remaining, come to the airport and get on planes in the time that is remaining. We moved out more than that number just yesterday. So from our point of view, there is an opportunit­y right now for American citizens to come, to be admitted to the airport and to be evacuated safely and effectively.”

Sullivan said the U.S. does not plan to have an ongoing embassy presence after the final U.S. troop withdrawal. But he pledged the U.S. “will make sure there is safe passage for any American citizen, any legal permanent resident” after Tuesday, as well as for “those Afghans who helped us.” But untold numbers of vulnerable Afghans, fearful of a return to the brutality of pre-2001 Taliban rule, are likely to be left behind.

Blinken said the U.S. was working with other countries in the region to either keep the Kabul airport open after Tuesday or to reopen it “in a timely fashion.”

He also said that although the airport is crucial, “there are other ways to leave Afghanista­n, including by road and many countries border Afghanista­n.” The U.S., he said, is “making sure that we have in place all of the necessary tools and means to facilitate the travel for those who seek to leave Afghanista­n” after Tuesday.

There also are roughly 280 others who have said they are Americans but who have told the State Department they plan to remain in the country or are still undecided. According to the latest totals, about 114,000 people have been evacuated since the Taliban takeover on Aug. 14, including approximat­ely 2,900 on military and coalition flights during the 24 hours ending at 3 a.m. on Sunday.

Members of Congress criticized the chaotic and violent evacuation.

“We didn’t have to be in this rushrush circumstan­ce with terrorists breathing down our neck,” said Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said the U.S. policy in Afghanista­n, with 2,500 troops on the ground, had been working. “We were, in effect, keeping the lid on, keeping terrorists from reconstitu­ting, and having a light footprint in the country,” he said.

 ?? MC2 KAILA V. PETERS/U.S. NAVY VIA AP ?? Evacuees from Afghanista­n board a flight bound for the United States from Naval Air Station Sigonella, Italy.
MC2 KAILA V. PETERS/U.S. NAVY VIA AP Evacuees from Afghanista­n board a flight bound for the United States from Naval Air Station Sigonella, Italy.

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