Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Last soldier out: Iconic photo captures the end of America’s longest war

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Photo: U.S. Central Command via AP

How it ended: This image, made through a night-vision scope, shows the final American soldier to depart Afghanistan after America’s longest war.

Driving the news: Army Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne Division, who was coordinating the evacuation, boarded a C-17 cargo plane that lifted off from Kabul at 3:29 p.m. ET on Monday.


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Image: George W. Bush Presidential Library

How it started: On Oct. 7, 2001 — 7,267 days earlier, nearly 20 years — President George W. Bush announced the invasion, in the aftermath of 9/11: “We will not waver; we will not tire; we will not falter; and we will not fail. Peace and freedom will prevail.”

  • 1 in 4 of today’s Americans hadn’t been born, AP notes.

The toll: 2,461 U.S. service members killed … 20,000 injured … 3,846 U.S. contractors killed … 66,000 Afghan military and police killed … 47,245 Afghan civilians killed … 51,191 Taliban and opposition fighters killed.

  • The tab (Afghanistan and Iraq): $2 trillion.

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Photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

The Pentagon announcement came at 4:30 p.m. ET, with Gen. Frank McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command, speaking remotely from Tampa (shown above with Pentagon press secretary John Kirby).

  • “Every single U.S. service member is now out of Afghanistan,” McKenzie said in response to a question. “I can say that with 100% certainty.”

“It’s a mission that brought Osama bin Laden to a just end along with many of his al-Qaeda co-conspirators,” the general said.

  • “I’m proud that both my son and I have been a part of it.”

McKenzie acknowledged: “We did not get everybody out that we wanted to get out.”

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Photo: AFP via Getty Images

Above: Celebratory gunfire lit up the night sky in Kabul after the last U.S. plane took off — leaving the Taliban back in power, after all that.

  • ABC’s Ian Pannell said in a special report, following the Pentagon briefing: “I was in Kabul the day it was liberated — the day the Taliban fled — and we were there again the day that the Taliban came back. And I think that will leave many Afghans wondering what this was all about. What happened to their hopes, their dreams, the lives that they built?”

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President Biden will address the nation Tuesday afternoon at 1:30 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.axios.com/afghanistan-last-soldier-photo-withdrawal-8ebc3953-0920-410d-a33c-2a063343653e.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Mike Allen



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