US cutting staff at Kabul embassy to 'core diplomatic presence'
The US announced on Thursday it is further reducing staff at its Embassy in Kabul as the Taliban seize additional territory from government forces.
- Middle East
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 09:34 | 12 August 2021
- Modified Date: 10:34 | 12 August 2021
State Department spokesman Ned Price said the US would be cutting down "to a core diplomatic presence in Afghanistan" at the embassy within the coming weeks and the Pentagon will send additional troops to beef up security at Hamid Karzai International Airport as embassy staffers leave the country.
"Let me be very clear about this: the embassy remains open and we plan to continue our diplomatic work in Afghanistan," Price told reporters. "The United States will continue to support consular services and that includes the processing and operations of the Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) program, and we'll continue to engage in diplomacy with the Afghan government."
Three infantry battalions consisting of roughly 3,000 troops will be deployed to the Kabul airport in the next two days, according to the Pentagon. An additional 1,000 troops will be sent to Doha "in the coming days" to help with the processing of SIV applicants, said spokesman John Kirby.
An additional combat infantry brigade will be sent to Kuwait, and will be sent to Kabul "if needed to provide additional security at the airport," said Kirby, noting the Pentagon anticipates flying embassy staffers out of Kabul.
The State Department declined to disclose how many staffers are departing Afghanistan but maintained the US is focused "on increasing the tempo of our relocation operations" for Afghan nationals who aided the US even as Washington reduces its diplomatic staff.
So far, more than 1,200 Afghans have been brought to the US, and daily flights will begin landing in the country in the "coming days," said Price.
The Taliban took control of the Afghan National Army's 217th Pamir Corps headquarters and airport in the strategically important northern province of Kunduz earlier Thursday, forcing soldiers to flee, a government official confirmed.
The hardline group seized all of the facility's weapons and ammunition and separately took Ghazni in central Afghanistan from government forces, making it the tenth provincial capital to fall to them.
Ghazni lies just 150 kilometers (93 miles) from Kabul.
Meanwhile, the Afghan government Defense Ministry claimed to have killed 326 Taliban fighters in the last 24 hours in ground and air offensives against the insurgents.
And in Qatar, representatives from the UN, China, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, the UK and EU, Germany, India, Norway, Tajikistan, Turkey and Turkmenistan were holding talks in Doha aimed at forging consensus on pressing for a cease-fire and reduction in violence, and "not to recognize any force that seeks to take control of Afghanistan at the barrel of a gun," said Price.
A joint statement was expected to be announced later Thursday.