DECEMBER 9, 2022
Afghanistan News USA News

It cost 7 Billion Dollars but US denies left military gear behind in Afghanistan evacuation

It cost 7 Billion Dollars but US denies left military gear behind in Afghanistan evacuation

The United States National Security Council spokesman John Kirby denied the military gear left by US armed forces in Afghanistan fell into the hands of militants.

He rejected the notion that the US abandoned military hardware in Afghanistan on a question in a news briefing.

“There was no equipment left behind by American forces. There was a small amount of equipment and some aircraft at the airport when we finished our evacuation efforts, but they were all rendered unusable. In fact, the only thing that we left that the Taliban could take advantage of was some tow trucks and trucks with ladders on them, and that kind of thing; I think some firefighting equipment.”

“The militants gained the control of the military equipment, about $7 billion, left behind by American forces,” ARY News reporter Jahanzeb Ali questioned. “Just let me stop you right there.”

Kirby did admit that military equipment fell into the hands of militants saying, “the equipment that you’re talking about, was transferred well in advance of our departure to the Afghan National Security Forces”.

It belonged to the Afghan security forces, that was part of the mission of our troops to train up and to support Afghan national security forces as they took charge of security in their country.”

Kirby said that Afghan forces abandoned that equipment, not the United States.

The spokesperson said that Washington would work with Pakistan to counter the threat it faced from Afghanistan border.

Replying to another question about President Biden’s remarks that Pakistan is the most dangerous country with the nuclear weapons, John Kirby said the Biden administration would work with Pakistan to mitigate threat from Afghanistan border.

“We know that the Pakistani people continue to suffer the threat from terrorism, particularly along that border, that border with Afghanistan. And we’re going to continue to work with Pakistan to help address those kinds of security threats to their own people and to their own borders because it’s not an insignificant threat. There’s a – there is a lot of danger that’s still posed to the Pakistani people, and the President understands that, and he’s committed to continue to work with Pakistan.”

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On This Day

On this day, 2011, after 11 months of Arab Spring protests in Yemen, Ali Abdullah Saleh, the former President of Yemen, signed a legal immunity agreement, paving the way for the transfer of power to his deputy, Mansour Hadi, and then to Rashad al-Alimi. Since then, with the assistance of Saudi Arabia and the United States, they have initiated a bloody war in Yemen, leading to the death of over hundreds of thousands of people. 

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