Western forces pack up to end their war, Afghans "manage the
consequences"
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[July 01, 2021]
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghan scrap
dealers are picking over the detritus of the two-decade U.S. military
intervention in Afghanistan, collecting whatever they can of value from
heaps of broken military hardware, scrapped machines and old furniture.
While the scrap men search through junk outside the main U.S. base in
Afghanistan, the Afghan government, and the country as a whole, are
having to face up to the end of an international mission that promised
so much but failed to bring peace.
"There's just so much waste," said scrap dealer Abdul Ahmad, outside the
Bagram Airfield, about 50 km (31 miles) north of the capital, Kabul, as
he surveyed the pickings.
"They didn't do anything for us since they came and now they're leaving
us with an uncertain future and so much destruction."
Over Afghanistan's decades of war, the Bagram air base has been a grand
prize for whoever holds the upper hand in the fight.
Now U.S. forces will hand it over to Afghan government forces as they
face a surging war with the Taliban and questions swirl about their
prospects.
Guards in body armour still control the heavily fortified entrance to
Bagram - a favourite target for suicide bombers over the years - and
helicopters clatter overhead and an occasional truck comes and goes.
But few people remain in the expanse of prefab facilities that grew up
alongside the giant runway in the months and years after international
forces arrived in late 2001, as the defeated Taliban fled from U.S.
bombers to mountains on the Pakistani border.
Two U.S. security officials said this week the majority of U.S. military
personnel would most likely be gone by July 4, with a residual force
remaining to protect the embassy.
Many Afghans, like Ahmad, feel abandoned.
Last month, U.S. President Joe Biden told his Afghan counterpart, Ashraf
Ghani, that "Afghans are going to have to decide their future, what they
want".
Ghani said his job was now to "manage the consequences" of the U.S.
withdrawal.
This week, General Austin Miller, the top U.S.commander in Afghanistan,
acknowledged the rapid loss of several districts to the Taliban was
worrisome. Only "a political settlement" could establish peace among the
warring Afghan sides, he said.
'TRAIL OF DESTRUCTION'
America's allies, most of them NATO members, who have been supporting
its efforts in Afghanistan are also packing up and getting out at the
end of a mission that at its height was hailed as a worthy example of
NATO unity and cooperation, and as a model for its operations.
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Afghan National Army (ANA) soldiers stand guard at a check point
near the Bagram Airbase north of Kabul, Afghanistan April 2, 2020.
REUTERS/Omar Sobhani/File Photo
The German military this week concluded its
withdrawal, finishing Germany's deadliest military mission since
World War Two.
In northern Afghanistan, Camp Marmal was the biggest German armed
forces base outside their homeland. Its once bustling cafes, gyms,
salon, handicraft shops, hospital and entertainment zones are all
shut.
German forces shipped home the equivalent of about 800 containers of
equipment including armoured vehicles, helicopters, weapons and
ammunition. Even a 27-tonne war memorial was shipped to the German
armed forces' joint operations command in Potsdam.
The base has been handed over to Afghan forces.
Brigadier General Ansgar Meyer, the commander of German forces in
Afghanistan, told Reuters in an interview before the German's
withdrawal that the hospitality of the Afghan people under the most
difficult circumstances was something everyone could learn from.
"This is still one of the poorest countries in the world but the
immense friendliness with which Afghans welcome anyone is amazing,"
he said. "These are characteristic traits that we in Europe might
want to copy."
For the Taliban, fighting since 2001 to expel foreign forces, the
departure of their enemies cannot come soon enough.
"Wherever the invaders have gone they leave a trail of destruction,"
Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said of Western forces,
adding that the Taliban remained on guard in case of any last-minute
deception.
Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia Programme at the
Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, said concrete gains were made
over the two decades: "The removal of a brutal regime, the degrading
of al Qaeda, and improvements in women's rights."
"But at the end of the day, the balance sheet on the NATO mission is
sad and sobering. And the Afghan people that will pay the biggest
price," he said.
(Editing by Robert Birsel)
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