Desperation deepens at Kabul airport as Joe Biden warns about difficulty of airlifts

The US President has admitted he cannot predict the outcome of one of the "most difficult airlifts in history".

US Marines during an evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, 20 August 2021.

US Marines during an evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, 20 August 2021. Source: US Central Command Public Affair

Desperation deepened around Kabul's airport on Saturday with evacuation operations in chaos and US President Joe Biden warning he could not predict the outcome of one of the "most difficult airlifts in history".

Six days after the Taliban took back power in Afghanistan, the flow of people trying to flee their feared hardline rule continued to overwhelm the international community.

Traffic, people, and checkpoints choked roads to the airport, while families hoping for a miracle escape crowded between the barbed-wire surrounds of an unofficial no-man's land separating the Taliban from US-troops and remnants of an Afghan special forces brigade helping them.

Video of a US soldier lifting a baby over a wall at Kabul's airport offered the latest tragic imagery of the utter despair, following horror footage of people hanging onto the outside of departing planes.
"Please, please, please help me... where should I go, what should I do," one man, who said he worked for the US embassy in the mid-2000s, wrote on a WhatsApp group set up for people to share information on how to get out.

"I have tried to get there (to the airport) for some days, but I cannot reach. Please save me."
Thousands of US soldiers were at the airport trying to shepherd foreigners and Afghans onto flights, but Mr Biden admitted the troops' presence offered no guarantees of safe passage.

"This is one of the largest, most difficult airlifts in history," Mr Biden said in a televised address. 

"I cannot promise what the final outcome will be."

Another 80 Australian citizens, Afghan visa holders and a number of New Zealand nationals .

Evacuation deadline

US military helicopters were deployed to rescue more than 150 Americans unable to reach the airport on Friday morning, an official in Washington said.

It was the first report of US forces going beyond the airport to help people seeking evacuation.

A German civilian was also shot and wounded on his way to the airport, a government spokeswoman in Berlin said on Friday.

Mr Biden had set a deadline of 31 August to completely withdraw all troops from Afghanistan, but he flagged this could be extended to continue the airlifts.

"We're going to make that judgment as we go," he said.

About 13,000 people have left on American military aircraft, the White House said. Thousands of others have fled on other foreign military flights.
Afghans prepare to board a US plane during an evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul.
Afghans prepare to board a US plane during an evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul. Source: US Marine Corps
The Taliban has vowed not to seek revenge against their opponents, promising a general amnesty for anyone who worked with the US-backed government.

But an intelligence document for the United Nations said militants have been going door-to-door hunting down former government officials and those who worked with US and NATO forces. 

According to the confidential document by the UN's threat assessment consultants seen by AFP, militants were also screening people on the way to Kabul airport. 

The German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle reported that the Taliban had shot dead the relative of one of its journalists while searching for the editor.

Collective pride

At the first Friday prayers since the Taliban's return to power, imams and guest speakers celebrated the defeat of the United States.

At one mosque in Kabul, gunmen flanked a scholar as he delivered a fiery speech in which he recounted how Afghans had beaten the British Empire, the Soviet Union and now the United States on the battlefield.

"Afghans have once again shown collective pride," he said.

At another mosque, the imam referenced the tragic scenes at the airport, describing those trying to flee as not having strong enough religious convictions.

"Those with weak faith are running after or hanging from American planes," he said.

"They should stay and build their country."


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Published 21 August 2021 7:41am
Updated 21 August 2021 12:09pm
Source: AFP, SBS


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