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So much for Joe's threats: Taliban IGNORE Biden's demand to let civilians into Kabul airport and westerners are beaten. US airlifts more than 19K in 24 hours as desperate Afghans cause a STAMPEDE at the airport amid fears of an ISIS-K attack

Thousands converged on Kabul airport on Wednesday in a desperate bid to leave Afghanistan amid reports the Taliban are stopping westerners getting in, less than 24 hours after President Joe Biden said he would only pull troops by August 31 if the insurgents allow safe passage.

The U.S. has ramped up its airlifts and has evacuated 19,000 people in the last 24 hours and has already started pulling out military forces with just six days until the deadline, which Biden has promised to stick to. 

But the Taliban has ignored the president's threats and is beating up people trying to leave, according to reports, and both Democratic and Republican lawmakers have said there isn't enough time to get everyone out. 

Desperate Afghan men, women and children have swarmed the airport in a bid to get out amid fears of an attack from the Islamic State offshoot ISIS-K and 10,000 evacuees are inside the gates waiting to get out. 

The Pentagon said on Wednesday that US forces have 'been very clear' with the Taliban 'about what credentials we are willing to accept' for people trying to get to the airport.

'By and large, with caveats' people have been getting through checkpoints, spokesman John Kirby said, adding 'we also have other means to get people in.' 

'When we have reports that someone credentialed is not being let in, we are making that clear to Taliban leaders they need to let them in,' Kirby said. 

It was also revealed that a military operation recovered 'less than 20 people' from Kabul under cover of darkness and brought them safely to the airport for evacuation. 

Members of the GOP said on Tuesday night that Biden has 'blood on his hands' because thousands of American citizens and Afghan allies who helped U.S. troops could be left to die when the final evacuation flights depart - which could even be before midnight on Aug. 31 to ensure a safe evacuation of everyone at the airport.  

Rep. Seth Moulton, a Democrat from Massachusetts, and Rep. Peter Meijer, a Republican from Michigan, who underwent a secret trip to Kabul to witness the situation at the airport for themselves, challenged President Biden and claimed that 'we won't get everyone out on time'.   

The approaching deadline has sparked fears that the desperate men, women and children currently camped outside the military zone could attempt a last-ditch bid for freedom by storming the airport as they attempt to flee the Taliban - who have also set up checkpoints outside the airport.

The U.S. may have to halt evacuation flights before the weekend in a bid to get all American personnel out, after France warned there operation would stop in hours and the former head of the UK armed forces said they would be wrapped up in two days.

Some 300 American soldiers out of the 6,000 that secured the airport in Kabul were flown out from Afghanistan yesterday, with the remaining forces expected to follow suit in the coming days. 

Republicans, Donald Trump and members of the Trump administration continued their criticism of Biden's botched evacuation overnight. 

Trump said Tuesday night: 'How dare Biden force our military to run off the battlefield in Afghanistan and desert what now have become many thousands of American hostages.' 

'We had Afghanistan and Kabul in perfect control with just 2,500 soldiers and he destroyed it when it was demanded that they flee,' he added in an emailed statement.

In a Tuesday podcast interview the former president said his administration had Afghanistan 'so under control, like you wouldn't believe.' 

'I'm not sure the way we got out would even allow us to get out,' he said on The Truth with Lisa Boothe, seemingly predicting future U.S. engagement with the war-torn country.

Senator Tom Cotton said 'Joe Biden and his team are letting the Taliban call the shots' on a Fox podcast Wednesday morning. 

Senator Lindsey Graham questioned 'How could we create a deadline that is a death sentence to those who fought along our side?'

'There's nobody to blame but Biden here,' Graham said on Fox radio today, adding the U.S. is leaving 'thousands of Afghans, most likely American citizens, and what we're leaving behind is an Al Qaeda on steroids.' 

Ex-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo joined his boss in heckling Biden, tearing into him in an op-ed Tuesday night.

'President Biden’s incompetence has left Americans in harm’s way and is dishonoring those who serve and our country,' he wrote on Fox.  

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Kabul airportKabul airport

Desperate Afghans waded through a sewage ditch on the outskirts of Kabul airport this morning while pleading with soldiers guarding the opposite bank to put them on a plane out of the country as time runs out to flee Taliban rule

Kabul airportKabul airport

A lucky man is hauled to safety by a soldier and allowed one step closer to freedom, but most were left wallowing in filth as their pleas fell on deaf ears with as little as 24 hours left until civilian mercy flights top

Australian man beaten bloody near Kabul airportAustralian man beaten bloody near Kabul airport

A man claiming to be an Australian citizen was beaten bloody by Taliban guards at a checkpoint in Kabul today, after the Taliban vowed to block any more people from going to the airport

 Ted Cruz accused Biden of 'claiming Afghanistan is some great diplomatic achievement' on Twitter Wednesday.

The White House revealed today that over the last 24 hours, 42 American flights dealt with the bulk of evacuations - transporting 11,200 from Kabul - meaning the U.S. has evacuated and facilitated the evacuation of approximately 87,900 people on U.S. military and coalition flights since the end of July.

Major General Hank Taylor announced at the Pentagon briefing on Wednesday that 400 U.S. troops were evacuated from Kabul.

Some of those were part of the 6,000 sent to aid with the evacuation. Taylor said the military withdrawal was 'very much part of the original drawdown plan.' About 5,400 troops are still on the ground in Kabul. 

With military personnel required to have retreated from the country by Biden's August 31 deadline, it is feared civilian evacuations could be halted in a matter of days to ensure enough time is left for U.S. soldiers to leave the airport before the cut off.  

Roughly 10,000 'vulnerable Afghans' have been evacuated by US-led forces since August 20, Taylor said. 

Kirby vowed that 'needed populations' will be evacuated 'all the way to the end' but acknowledged the US will 'have to reserve some time in the last couple of days' for military equipment to be removed.

The Taliban said on Tuesday that all foreign evacuations from the country must be completed by August 31, and asked Washington to stop urging highly skilled Afghans to leave the country. 

And speaking later on Tuesday, the President said the U.S. is on pace to finish evacuations from Afghanistan on time, but left open the chance of extending the deadline, saying reaching that goal depends on cooperation from the country's new Taliban rulers.  

'The sooner we can finish, the better,' Biden said. 'Each day of operations brings added risk to our troops.' 

And the desperate efforts to evacuate as many Americans and allies from Afghanistan as possible have been affected by the Taliban who have banned Afghans from fleeing the country.

There are also reports that Westerners are also currently unable to reach the airport and are being 'blocked from getting to Kabul airport' by Taliban fighters who are seeking to stem the flow of Afghans leaving.   

This situation gave rise to comments from President Biden, who continued to stick to his August 31 deadline, but only so long as the Taliban uphold its agreement to allow Westerners and vulnerable Afghans free passage to the airport.      

Continued coordination with the Taliban remains crucial to meeting the deadline, he said, but he called it a 'tenuous situation' with a 'serious risk of breaking down as time goes on.'

And Pentagon commanders have warned evacuation efforts are under threat from an Islamic State-offshoot, known as ISIS-K, who are 'targeting' evacuation planes at Kabul airport. 

Speaking yesterday, President Biden said the US is on pace to finish evacuations from Afghanistan on time, but left open the chance of extending the deadline, saying reaching that goal depends on cooperation from the country's new Taliban rulers

Speaking yesterday, President Biden said the US is on pace to finish evacuations from Afghanistan on time, but left open the chance of extending the deadline, saying reaching that goal depends on cooperation from the country's new Taliban rulers

Fears are growing that crowds could try to storm the airport once civilian mercy flights stop, or that opportunistic terrorists could attack the densely-packed crowd

Fears are growing that crowds could try to storm the airport once civilian mercy flights stop, or that opportunistic terrorists could attack the densely-packed crowd

This was echoed by two U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, who said there was growing concern about the risk of suicide bombings by Islamic State at the airport, which has been overwhelmed by Afghans and foreign citizens rushing to leave.

Those concerns are based on 'a very specific threat stream' from the Afghanistan ISIS affiliate regarding possible attacks on crowds outside the airport, a defense official told CNN.

ISIS-K is a sworn enemy of the Taliban, and intelligence officials reportedly believe they are actively planning multiple attacks in a bid to create mayhem at the airport. 

More than 100 ISIS-K affiliated inmates escaped from two prisons near Kabul amid the Taliban's advance on the city, the outlet reports.

A regional source told them several hundred ISIS-K members could have escaped. 

Asked about the possible escape a Taliban spokesman only said the reports were not confirmed. 

'There have been reports that some ill-wishers want to disrupt the security situation there by attacking and harming people and the media. So don't go close to the airport to avoid being hurt,' they told CNN. 

One U.S. official said it was no longer a question of if, but when, militants would attack and the priority was to get out before it happened.

The fears that some people won't get out of Kabul will only grow in the coming days as as civilian mercy flights stop and troops begin withdrawing from the airport, with hundreds of American soldiers already thought to have left on flights that departed Tuesday.

There are signs that even foreign nationals are struggling to evacuate. A man claiming to be an Australian citizen was beaten bloody by Taliban fighters as he tried to reach the airport Wednesday.

The man, whose identity is unknown, filmed himself at what appears to be a Taliban checkpoint. Blood can be seen running down his face and onto his shirt while he says in accented English, 'They hit me... I am an Australian citizen.'

He then talks about trying to reach the airport, though his words are partially obscured by the sound of Taliban guards cocking and firing an AK47 rifle over his head - before the footage cuts out. 

Biden has committed the US to withdraw by August 31, a decision that western allies warn will mean thousands of Afghans who were promised sanctuary being left behind

Biden has committed the US to withdraw by August 31, a decision that western allies warn will mean thousands of Afghans who were promised sanctuary being left behind

The Taliban has said it will now block all Afghan citizens from reaching the airport, meaning that those who are not already outside the gates face little prospect of being able to escape

The Taliban has said it will now block all Afghan citizens from reaching the airport, meaning that those who are not already outside the gates face little prospect of being able to escape

American troops and their allies have evacuated some 70,000 people from the airport since the Taliban took power on August 14, but the effort falls far short of the more-than 100,000 that western nations had promised to take

American troops and their allies have evacuated some 70,000 people from the airport since the Taliban took power on August 14, but the effort falls far short of the more-than 100,000 that western nations had promised to take

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A US marine comforts a child at Kabul airport as the evacuation operation nears it end, with US allies saying flights could stop within the next 24 hours

A US marine comforts a child at Kabul airport as the evacuation operation nears it end, with US allies saying flights could stop within the next 24 hours

A US marine carries a child towards an evacuation aircraft at Kabul airport as the final mercy flights depart the country

A US marine carries a child towards an evacuation aircraft at Kabul airport as the final mercy flights depart the country

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The desperation to get on the last flights is already plain, with people standing in sewage up to their knees on the south side of the airport today while begging soldiers to let them inside.   

'We won't get everyone out even by Sept 11': Democrat and Republican lawmakers pay secret trip to Kabul 

Two US military vets who now serve as congressmen flew unannounced into Afghanistan to monitor the on going evacuation efforts as they called on President Joe Biden to extend the US withdrawal deadline past August 31. 

Rep. Seth Moulton, a Democrat from Massachusetts, and Rep. Peter Meijer, a Republican from Michigan, flew in and out of Kabul airport on Tuesday, with both men adding that they boarded return flights with empty seats so as not to take away space from fleeing Americans and Afghans. 

They appeared to condemn Joe Biden over his chaotic withdrawal from the war-torn country, and predicted the US would not be able to airlift everyone eligible to leave Afghanistan on time.  

 In a joint statement, they said: 'It's obvious that because we started the evacuation so late, that no matter what we do, we won't get everyone out on time, even by September 11.

'Sadly and frustratingly, getting our people out depends on maintaining the current, bizarre relationship with the Taliban.'

Many Afghans fear a repeat of the brutal five-year Taliban regime that was toppled in 2001, and violent retribution for working with foreign militaries, Western missions and the previous U.S.-backed government.

Washington and its allies have been flying out thousands of such Afghans every day on hulking military transports, but it has become an increasingly difficult and desperate task.

Speaking on Tuesday, Biden confirmed that in the past 12 hours, 19 U.S. military flights evacuated approximately 6,400 people and 31 coalition flights carrying 5,600 people have left Kabul. 

A White House official told CNN yesterday that the number of Americans remaining in Afghanistan as of August 14 was 'probably lower than most people believe', but declined to confirm exactly how many remain in the country.

Though officials believe that thousands of Americans and their Allies remain in the Afghan capital, the New York Times reports. 

The Afghan capital's airport has been gripped by chaos as US-led troops try to maintain a secure perimeter for evacuation flights, surrounded by desperate Afghans.

Some have foreign passports, visas or eligibility to travel, but most do not. At least eight people have died in the chaos.

'Does anyone ... ANYONE ... have a contact inside the airport,' pleaded one American on a WhatsApp group set up to share information on how people can access the airport.

'My guy worked for us 2010-15 and needs to get out with 5 of his family. This is real bad.'

The Taliban have also been accused of blocking or slowing access for many trying to reach the airport, although they denied the charge again late Tuesday.

Biden said the Taliban were taking steps to assist, but there was also an 'acute and growing risk' of an attack by the regional chapter of the Islamic State jihadist group.

Speaking yesterday, the President said he had asked the Pentagon and the State Department to develop contingency plans to push past the deadline should that prove necessary.

The Democratic president, whose administration has been under fire for its handling of the pullout, said U.S. forces had now helped evacuate 87,900 people since Aug. 14.

Sen. Marco Rubio said on Twitter Wednesday morning, 'A President that abandons Americans in order to meet a deadline set by a medieval band of terrorists will forever be disgraced.'

In an earlier post he suggested Biden 'inform' the Taliban that U.S. forces will remain in Kabul until everyone is evacuated, and 'If they get in the way they will be killed.'

Democrat Sen. Richard Blumenthal also appeared to criticize Biden's Aug. 31 decision, despite not mentioning the president by name.

'Rescuing U.S. citizens & Afghan allies from this humanitarian nightmare is a moral imperative demanding a continued military & diplomatic effort beyond Aug 31. Afghans who put their lives on the line deserve no less,' he wrote on Twitter Wednesday. 

Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina criticized Biden's 'disastrous decision' to hold firm on his end-of-the-month deadline on Wednesday morning, which he said was 'cemented by his administration’s prior ill-conceived timeline agreement with the Taliban instead of the conditions on the ground.'

'We deserve to know the full extent of the agreement with the Taliban, including the arbitrary and inflexible deadline that led us to the humiliating point of the Taliban dictating terms to the U.S. and setting a red line,' the GOP lawmaker wrote on Twitter. 

Former Trump campaign aide David Bossie blamed Biden for 'singlehandedly' causing the unfolding crisis in Afghanistan in a Fox News op-ed published Wednesday.

'In his never-ending rush to appease his socialist base, Biden allowed the murderous Taliban to takeover Afghanistan, put thousands of American lives at risk, embarrass our great country, and make us far less secure and respected as a nation,' Bossie wrote. 

Nebaska Sen. Ben Sasse said 'Damn the deadline' in a statement on Tuesday. 

'Americans want us to stay until we get our people out, and so do our allies. The Biden administration needs to cut the Stockholm syndrome,' he fumed.

Rep. Don Bacon, a veteran who serves on the House Armed Services Committee, said there was a 'potential for lots of American hostages' in a Wednesday morning C-SPAN interview. 

'This was a colossal disaster, it was avoidable. The president's policy was just a huge mistake. He overruled the military and the intelligence advisers in the White House and did what he thought was right, but it was a political objective if you asked me,' he said.

Rep. Mo Brooks said Biden 'will abandon Americans in Afghanistan' after Aug. 31 on Twitter Wednesday, adding 'We need Donald J. Trump back in the White House.' 

Biden said his administration was working to rebuild a system for processing refugees that he said was 'purposely destroyed' by his Republican predecessor.

'We must all work together to resettle thousands of Afghans who ultimately qualify for refugee status. The United States will do our part,' he said.

Biden has also frequently pointed to Trump's peace deal with the Taliban that included a May 1 withdrawal deadline as his reason for pursuing the chaotic drawdown.

But on Tuesday night Pompeo claimed the Trump strategy 'utilized a combination of deterrence and negotiated agreements based on conditions in the country to keep the Taliban in check while we withdrew our forces.'

'We told the Taliban: if you violate the agreements, you will pay a heavy price. And we backed up those threats with action. We pressured the Ghani government to work through the reconciliation process or face serious costs,' he said, despite the Afghan government's notable exclusion from Trump's Taliban negotiations. 

During a G7 meeting with other world leaders yesterday, Biden 'point blank' refused pleas from his allies to extend the August 31 deadline, and later said during a press conference he believes the evacuation will be complete on time.

However, concerns have been raised about the security at Kabul airport, where thousands of US troops are currently holding the line, with the Taliban now blocking access to the site.

People on the ground claim that Westerners in Afghanistan are being 'blocked from getting to Kabul airport' by Taliban fighters after the extremist group banned locals from fleeing the country.

The militant group today issued an edict saying only foreigners will be able to access the airport for evacuation.

A spokesperson for the group ordered locals to return home. Roads in the city have been blocked in a bid to stop Afghans from leaving.

Quoting 'multiple sources', Politico's Alex Thompson said: 'The Taliban has now started halting people trying to get in through the airport gates. 

Afghan families are pictured boarding a military evacuation flight at Hamid Karzai Airport as the US prepares to withdraw from the country, with other western nations set to follow

Afghan families are pictured boarding a military evacuation flight at Hamid Karzai Airport as the US prepares to withdraw from the country, with other western nations set to follow

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Taliban are killing innocent children, former interior minister claims 

Afghanistan's former interior minister has claimed the Taliban are killing innocent children as they brutally consolidate power.

Masoud Andarabi, who was sacked by the now former Afghan president Ashraf Ghani in March, posted shocking photos on Twitter of people, including a small child, who had allegedly been killed by Taliban fighters. 

He claimed that the group, who now control nearly all of Afghanistan after dramatically marching into the capital Kabul last week, 'are trying to rule over people by terrorizing, killing young children and elderly citizens.'  

Andarabi added that the Taliban 'cannot govern the nation' using such terror methods.

'Not just Afghans but American citizens. Informal groups coordinating need to redirect people on the fly.'

However, in his address yesterday, Bide reiterated his message to the Taliban that the August 31 deadline could only be met if they upheld their agreement not to impede on the operation in any way.

Security concerns have also been raised by Pentagon commanders, who have warned that an Afghan-based Islamic State-offshoot called ISIS-K are 'targeting' evacuation planes flying out of Kabul.

The threat comes from an ISIS affiliate in Afghanistan known as ISIS-K, Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant – Khorasan Province. ISIS announced its expansion to the Khorasan region in 2015, which historically encompasses parts of modern day Iran, Central Asia, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.

Joe Biden on Tuesday evening warned of the threat posed by ISIS-K, but Pentagon officials gave more detail in a closed-door briefing to Congress, which was relayed to Politico by three congressional aides and another source familiar with the intelligence.

'Each day of operations brings added risk to our troops,' Biden said. 

'ISIS-K is seeking to target the airport and attack U.S. and allied forces and innocent civilians.' 

Further details on their plots were not shared - but U.S. forces left hordes of powerful weapons behind after withdrawing across Afghanistan, which could now be used against its own personnel.

U.S. planes landing at Kabul Airport earlier this week were also spotted doing steep 'diving combat' landings in a bid to avoid potential attack, and were photographed dropping flares which could draw away any missiles fired at them.  

The officials said that the security situation around the airport had significantly deteriorated in recent days, given the new terror threats, and contributed to Biden's decision not to declare an extension of the August 31 deadline for all U.S. troops to leave.

ISIS-K is targeting airport gates - which have seen thousands of people gather in a bid to flee - as well as military and commercial aircraft evacuating people from the capital city, the sources told Politico. 

They said the Defense Department officials told the meeting they are trying to mitigate the threats as best as possible. 

Gates at the airport were closed because of the security threat, the sources said.

There was also panic after the U.S. embassy reportedly issued a last call for its citizens to leave Afghanistan, only to then recall the warning minutes later. 

The Biden administration is under intense pressure to wrap up a chaotic evacuation without leaving Americans or Afghans with visas behind. The president's hurried withdrawal has drawn criticism from all sides: Republicans, Democrats, foreign policy hawks, humanitarian group sand international allies, who said they felt blindsided.

And two U.S. military vets, now serving as congressmen, who flew unannounced into Afghanistan to monitor the on going evacuation efforts have called on President Joe Biden to extend the U.S. withdrawal deadline past August 31. 

A US soldier walks two Afghan women towards an evacuation plane on the runway at Hamid Karzai Airport this week

A US soldier walks two Afghan women towards an evacuation plane on the runway at Hamid Karzai Airport this week

An Afghan woman accompanied by a young child walks towards a US evacuation plane sitting on the runway at Kabul airport

An Afghan woman accompanied by a young child walks towards a US evacuation plane sitting on the runway at Kabul airport

'The Taliban is now fully-armed and in control of the entire country': Former UK commander warns of weapons seized by Taliban during takeover

The Taliban's grip on Afghanistan has also been strengthened by the weapons, equipment and vehicles abandoned by the Afghan security forces as the militants swept through the country - that the US had only supplied earlier this year.

Among the military haul collected by the Taliban during their offensive, are 61,000 high-explosive rounds, two million AK47 bullets, 10,000 70mm rockets, A-29 light aircraft, and 89,000 brand new combat shirts, the Mirror reports.

Speaking to the publication, former commander of UK forces in Afghanistan Colonel Richard Kemp said: 'The ungoverned space of Afghanistan will be used by the Taliban's partners al-Qaeda and the tallies of equipment now being revealed are deeply disturbing.

'It means we are now facing a very well equipped terrorist army in Afghanistan that is being run by the new rulers of Afghanistan and that should concern us all.

'The Taliban is now fully-armed and in control of the entire country – and the west has left this equipment for them to help themselves.' 

Rep. Seth Moulton, a Democrat from Massachusetts, and Rep. Peter Meijer, a Republican from Michigan, flew in and out of Kabul airport on Tuesday, with both men adding that they boarded return flights with empty seats so as not to take away space from fleeing Americans and Afghans. 

They appeared to condemn Joe Biden over his chaotic withdrawal from the war-torn country, and predicted the U.S. would not be able to airlift everyone eligible to leave Afghanistan on time.  

'We conducted this visit in secret, speaking about it only after our departure, to minimize the risk and disruption to the people on the ground, and because we were there to gather information, not to grandstand,' the two said in a joint statement.

'As veterans, we care deeply about the situation on the ground at Hamid Karzai International Airport. America has a moral obligation to our citizens and loyal allies, and we must make sure that obligation is being kept.'  

Later on, they added: 'It's obvious that because we started the evacuation so late, that no matter what we do, we won't get everyone out on time, even by September 11.

'Sadly and frustratingly, getting our people out depends on maintaining the current, bizarre relationship with the Taliban.'

Nancy Pelosi was among lawmakers who condemned the trip, although they have continued to defend it.

In a letter seen by Politico, she wrote: 'Given the urgency of this situation, the desire of some Members to travel to Afghanistan and the surrounding areas is understandable and reflective of the high priority that we place on the lives of those on the ground.

'Member travel to Afghanistan and the surrounding countries would unnecessarily divert needed resources from the priority mission of safely and expeditiously evacuating America and Afghans at risk from Afghanistan.' 

Both Congressmen insisted their trip was meant to help ensure the U.S. was upholding its promises to evacuate Afghan people who'd aided its fight against the Taliban. 

They paid for their own tickets to the United Arab Emirates, then boarded a U.S. military plane bound for Kabul. Further details on how the men managed to get on board that aircraft have not been disclosed.  

CIA Director William Burns also, separately, flew to Kabul for a secret meeting with top Taliban leader Abdul Ghani Baradar, U.S. media reported Tuesday, the highest-level meeting so far between the U.S. government and the new rulers of Afghanistan.

The New York Times said the spy chief was not there to negotiate an extension to the pullout deadline, but for general talks on 'evacuation operations and terrorist threats'. 

Afghan civilians pack on to a Canadian evacuation flight out of Kabul, as western nations prepare to end the mercy missions

Afghan civilians pack on to a Canadian evacuation flight out of Kabul, as western nations prepare to end the mercy missions

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Despite the harrowing scenes at Kabul airport, the Taliban have ruled out any extension to next Tuesday's deadline to pull out foreign troops, describing it as 'a red line'.

'They have planes, they have the airport, they should get their citizens and contractors out of here,' Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said Tuesday.

European nations have said they would not be able to airlift all at-risk Afghans before August 31.

'Even if (the evacuation) goes on... a few days longer, it will not be enough,' German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas told Bild TV.

A hard withdrawal deadline presents a further complication that may reduce the number of daily evacuations.

The United States deployed fresh troops for evacuations.

That 6,000-plus contingent, as well as hundreds of U.S. officials, 600 Afghan troops and the equipment, will have to be flown out.

To do that by August 31, the Pentagon said operations would have to start winding down days in advance. 

Following their lightning victory that stunned the world, the Taliban have so far been content to allow the U.S.-led operation to continue, focusing instead on consolidating control and forming a government.

They have vowed a softer, more inclusive regime this time around, offering amnesty to opponents and assurances of rights to women.

But many Afghans remain fearful and skeptical.

A US Hercules transport plane waits on the tarmac at Zaragoza Airport, in Spain, as Afghans who already manage to flee Kabul are loaded on board for transport to their next destination

A US Hercules transport plane waits on the tarmac at Zaragoza Airport, in Spain, as Afghans who already manage to flee Kabul are loaded on board for transport to their next destination

Afghan people, who were evacuated from Kabul, disembark a plane at Torrejon Military Air Base in Madrid, Spain

Afghan people, who were evacuated from Kabul, disembark a plane at Torrejon Military Air Base in Madrid, Spain

An Afghan girl carrying a Mickey Mouse doll walks to a bus that will take them to a refugee processing center at Dulles International Airport, Virginia

An Afghan girl carrying a Mickey Mouse doll walks to a bus that will take them to a refugee processing center at Dulles International Airport, Virginia

Afghan families walk to a bus that will take them to a refugee processing center at Dulles International Airport, Virginia

Afghan families walk to a bus that will take them to a refugee processing center at Dulles International Airport, Virginia

Afghan families walk to a bus that will take them to a refugee processing center at Dulles International Airport

Afghan families walk to a bus that will take them to a refugee processing center at Dulles International Airport

The Taliban are killing innocent children as they brutally consolidate power, Afghanistan's former interior minister, Masoud Andarabi, has claimed as he posted shocking photos of people, including a small child, who had allegedly been murdered by the fighters

In an attempt to assuage fears, the Taliban spokesman on Tuesday urged skilled Afghans to not flee, saying the country needed 'expert' Afghans such as doctors and engineers.

But Zabihullah Mujahid added that women who work for the Afghan government should stay home until the security situation improves.

The Taliban have said women will be able to get an education and work, but within what they consider Islamic bounds.

And Afghanistan's former interior minister has claimed the Taliban are killing innocent children as they brutally consolidate power.

Masoud Andarabi, who was sacked by the now former Afghan president Ashraf Ghani in March, posted shocking photos on Twitter of people, including a small child, who had allegedly been killed by Taliban fighters. 

He claimed that the group, who now control nearly all of Afghanistan after dramatically marching into the capital Kabul last week, 'are trying to rule over people by terrorizing, killing young children and elderly citizens.'  

Andarabi added that the Taliban 'cannot govern the nation' using such terror methods.

The Taliban's grip on Afghanistan has also been strengthened by the weapons, equipment and vehicles abandoned by the Afghan security forces as the militants swept through the country - that the U.S. had only supplied earlier this year.

Taliban vow to tackle CLIMATE CHANGE: Terror group sets out its eco credentials (presumably by taking Afghanistan back to the Middle Ages) 

The Taliban has vowed to tackle climate change and global security as part of the terror group's attempt to rebrand itself and modernise despite reports of civilian executions and the erosion of women's rights under the new Afghan regime.

Abdul Qahar Balkhi, a member of the Taliban's Cultural Commission, says the Islamists want to play a role on the global stage.

He told Newsweek: 'We hope not only to be recognised by regional countries but the entire world at large as the legitimate representative government of the people of Afghanistan who have gained their right of self-determination from a foreign occupation with the backing and support of an entire nation after a prolonged struggle and immense sacrifices despite all odds being stacked against our people. 

'We believe the world has a unique opportunity of rapprochement and coming together to tackle the challenges not only facing us but the entire humanity.

'These challenges ranging from world security and climate change need the collective efforts of all, and cannot be achieved if we exclude or ignore an entire people who have been devastated by imposed wars for the past four decades.'

The Taliban has vowed to tackle climate change and global security as part of the terror group's attempt to rebrand itself and modernise

The Taliban has vowed to tackle climate change and global security as part of the terror group's attempt to rebrand itself and modernise

The comments come amid the Taliban's efforts to project a more moderate image, two decades after they were ousted from power in Afghanistan.

During their rule from 1996 to 2001, they committed massacres, eroded women's rights, burned vast areas of fertile land as part of its scorched earth policy, harboured terrorists and sold women into sex slavery as part of its harsh enforcement of Sharia law.

Despite their alleged climate change goals, the Taliban previously carried out heavy deforestation from an illegal timber trade.

Millions of acres of forests were cleared throughout the country to supply wood to the Pakistani markets with no reforestation efforts.  

 

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Among the military haul collected by the Taliban during their offensive, are 61,000 high-explosive rounds, two million AK47 bullets, 10,000 70mm rockets, A-29 light aircraft, and 89,000 brand new combat shirts, the Mirror reports.

Speaking to the publication, former commander of UK forces in Afghanistan Colonel Richard Kemp said: 'The ungoverned space of Afghanistan will be used by the Taliban's partners al-Qaeda and the tallies of equipment now being revealed are deeply disturbing.

'It means we are now facing a very well equipped terrorist army in Afghanistan that is being run by the new rulers of Afghanistan and that should concern us all.

'The Taliban is now fully-armed and in control of the entire country – and the west has left this equipment for them to help themselves.' 

While much of the attention has been focused on the evacuations in Afghanistan, aid agencies have warned of an impending humanitarian crisis for the population left behind. 

'There's a perfect storm coming because of several years of drought, conflict, economic deterioration, compounded by COVID,' David Beasley, the executive director of the U.N. World Food Programme, told Reuters in Doha, calling for the international community to donate $200 million in food aid.

'The number of people marching towards starvation has spiked to now 14 million.'

The EU said this week it was planning a quadrupling in aid and was seeking coordination with the United Nations on delivery as well as safety guarantees on the ground.

The U.N. human rights chief said she had received credible reports of serious violations by the Taliban, including 'summary executions' of civilians and Afghan security forces who had surrendered. The Taliban have said they will investigate any reports of atrocities.

Non-Government organizations have also been working independently from official channels to help special immigrant visa applicants, who have been cut off from the airport by Taliban checkpoints.

Retired Marine Corps Sgt. Ryan Rogers told Fox News: 'Everyone is p****d about this even being necessary,' he said. 'But if the president doesn't want to step up and lead, someone else will.'

While former secretary of state Hillary Clinton has also been reportedly attempted to charter flights out of the country for the country’s at-risk women, the New York Times has reported. 

And she has also been in contact with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, according to the Washington Examiner, to urge Canada to continue its evacuation work. 

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