Taliban celebrate 'complete independence' as last US troops leave Afghan
Celebratory gunfire echoed across Kabul as Taliban fighters took
control of the airport before dawn on Tuesday following the withdrawal of the
last US troops, ending 20
years of war that left the Islamic militia stronger than it was in 2001.
Shaky video footage distributed by the Taliban showed
fighters entering the airport after the last US troops took off a
minute before midnight, marking the end of a hasty and humiliating exit for
Washington and its NATO allies.
"The last US soldier has left
Kabul airport and our country gained complete independence," Taliban spokesman
Qari Yusuf said, according to Al Jazeera TV.
The US Army shared an image taken with night-vision optics of the
last US soldier to step aboard the final evacuation flight out of Kabul - Major
General Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne Division.
America's longest war took the lives of nearly 2,500 US troops and
an estimated 240,000 Afghans, and cost some $2 trillion.
Although it succeeded in driving the Taliban from power and
stopped Afghanistan being
used as a base by al Qaeda to attack the United States, it ended with the
hardline Islamic militants controlling more of the country than they ever did
during their previous rule from 1996 to 2001.
Those years were marked by the brutal enforcement of the Taliban's
strict interpretation of Islamic law, and the world is now watching to see
whether it forms a more moderate and inclusive government in the months ahead.
Thousands of Afghans have already fled fearing Taliban reprisals.
A massive but chaotic airlift by the United States and its allies over the past
two weeks succeeded in evacuating more than 123,000 people from Kabul, but tens
of thousands who helped Western countries during the war were left behind.
A contingent of Americans, estimated by US Secretary of State
Antony Blinken as under 200 and possibly closer to 100, wanted to leave but
were unable to get on the last flights.
General Frank McKenzie, commander of the US Central Command, told
a Pentagon briefing that the chief US diplomat in Afghanistan, Ross Wilson, was
on the last C-17 flight out.
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