City
Epaper

With Taliban at Kabul's doorstep, US embassy officials rush to destroy classified documents

By ANI | Updated: August 14, 2021 09:20 IST

As Taliban races to take control of Afghanistan and the terrorist group literally on the doorstep of Kabul, the US embassy in the capital city of the war-torn country is scrambling to destroy its classified documents and evacuate American citizens.

Open in App

As Taliban races to take control of Afghanistan and the terrorist group literally on the doorstep of Kabul, the US embassy in the capital city of the war-torn country is scrambling to destroy its classified documents and evacuate American citizens.

Due to mounting offensive by the Taliban, the terrorist group has managed to get hold of half of the country's 34 provincial capitals and now control roughly two-thirds of Afghanistan, with complete pullback of foreign troops just two weeks away.

The United States on Friday said it is "certainly concerned" by rapid the Taliban advances in Afghanistan, adding that the terror group is trying to isolate Kabul as they have "taken over border crossing, highways, and major intersections to control lines of communication and revenue".

As the security situation worsens in the country, 3,000 additional troops are en route to Afghanistan to assist with evacuation as the Taliban advances on Kabul.

During a press briefing, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby on Friday said Kabul is not right now an "imminent threat environment".

But Kirby added, "If you just look at what the Taliban's been doing, you can see that they are trying to isolate Kabul. Now what they want to do if they achieve that isolation I think only they can speak to."

Meanwhile, the Kabul embassy staff has begun destroying classified documents and equipment. An internal memo calls for the disposal of the American flag or items that could be used for propaganda purposes.

Back in Washington, the US State Department has begun preparing for a crisis, calling on volunteers with "High Threat, High Risk" and overseas experience for supporting US Embassy Kabul, The Washington Post reported citing a separate memo sent to staff.

Painting a grim picture of things to come in Afghanistan, one State Department official who works on security issues said that "the whole thing is about to go bad."

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: AfghanistanKabulTalibanPentagonAfgTalibansJohn kirby
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalWhite House Shooting: Suspect Rahmanullah Lakanwal Worked With Amazon and US Military, Say Reports

CricketZimbabwe Clinch First Home Test Victory Since 2013 With Dominant Win Over Afghanistan

Cricket'Immoral and Barbaric': Rashid Khan Reacts After Pakistan Airstrikes Kill 3 Cricketers in Afghanistan

InternationalPakistan-Afghanistan Conflict: At Least 15 Civilians Killed, Over 100 Injured in Pakistani Artillery Fire in Kandahar

CricketAFG vs BAN 2025 3rd ODI Highlights: Afghanistan Thrash Bangladesh by 200 Runs to Sweep ODI Series 3–0

International Realted Stories

InternationalEarthquake of magnitude 4.1 strikes Afghanistan

InternationalBangladesh: Muhammad Yunus announces a national day of mourning upon the death of Inqilab Mancha spokesperson

InternationalTrustees' Board renames John F Kennedy Center to Trump-Kennedy Center

InternationalMoS Anupriya Patel holds bilateral health talks with Sri Lanka, Fiji at 2nd WHO Traditional Medicine Summit

InternationalUkraine's "resilience" can weaken Putin's ability to prolong war: Zelenskyy