Ministers dismiss hopes of extending Kabul airlift beyond August 31
Biden starts to WITHDRAW US troops from Kabul after snubbing Boris and G7 pleas to extend evacuation – leaving humiliated PM to plead with Taliban to keep letting people out despite their BAN on Afghans leaving
The chances of extension to the August 31 deadline for withdrawing US forces from Kabul look to be recedingUK, France and Germany have been making final plea to US president at virtual G7 talks on the crisis todayThe Taliban have warned that they will not tolerate any delay to the departure of forces beyond August 31CIA chief reported to have held secret discussions with the Taliban leader in apparent sign of US desperation Boris Johnson and Joe Biden discussed the evacuation last night but seemed to make no significant progress
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Joe Biden today shrugged off pleas from Boris Johnson and other allies to extend the Kabul evacuation after the Taliban warned it will not tolerate delay to the August 31 deadline for troops leaving.
Boris Johnson, Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel used a G7 meeting to urge the US President to keep the operation going longer, but the entreaties appear to have fallen on deaf ears.
White House sources said Mr Biden had instead agreed with the Pentagon that there would be no change to the timeline of the mission.
A humiliated Mr Johnson said after the G7 summit that the UK will continue to conduct airlifts from the country ‘right up until the last moment’ as he pleaded with the Taliban to let people leave after the deadline.
He said the leaders had agreed that the ‘number one condition’ that the Taliban must meet moving forward is to ‘guarantee right the way through August 31 and beyond safe passage for those who want to come out’.
The Prime Minister insisted the G7 nations have ‘huge leverage’ over the Taliban because of the threat of sanctions as he said funding for the country would only be made available in the future if it meets the West’s expectations.
‘If those huge funds are going to be unfrozen eventually for use by the government and people of Afghanistan then what we are saying is Afghanistan can’t lurch back into becoming a breeding ground of terror, Afghanistan can’t become a narco state,’ he said.
The comments came after the Taliban repeating blood-curdling warnings of consequences if there was an attempt to cling on, saying no-one will be permitted to leave. ‘All people should be removed prior to that date,’ a spokesman told a press conference in the capital. ‘After that we do not allow them. We will take a different stance.’
According to Reuters, the Pentagon has told Mr Biden the risks to American forces are too high if they defy the Taliban. It means troops will have to abandon the humanitarian operation and start focusing on their own exit plan as soon as tomorrow.
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has warned of the danger of a ‘shooting war’ at the airport as the deadline approaches, after the RAF extracted another 2,000 people in the past 24 hours. Berlin and Paris have also been ramping up their evacuation, but there are still thousands of desperate people waiting to be taken to safety.
Efforts have been continuing on both sides of the Atlantic to get Mr Biden to change his approach, after he faced a furious backlash for his hamfisted handling of the crisis. The US chair of the House Intelligence Committee has said the current timetable for evacuating America citizens and their allies is almost certain to fail.
Tory MP Tom Tugendhat – who served as an Army officer in Afghanistan – said all the UK could do was ‘ask the Americans if they’re willing to stand with us’.
He added: ‘If they’re not then we can’t secure the perimeter and we can’t manage air traffic control, so if the Americans decide to go now I’m afraid that is it. But we can ask.’
Mr Tugendhat said he understands Mr Biden has to make ‘a very difficult decision’, but said many families are struggling to get through the gate and ‘a day, maybe two days longer, would help just a few more’.
In other developments in the Afghanistan crisis today:
The Ministry of Defence says 8,458 people have been evacuated by the RAF since August 13, including 5,171 Afghan locals who supported Western forces; CIA Director William J Burns is reported to have held a secret meeting in Kabul on Monday with the Taliban’s de facto leader Abdul Ghani Baradar – the highest level contact between the US and extremist regime so far; Mr Wallace today rebuked a former Royal Marine for complaining that UK forces are blocking a charter flight from taking his staff and rescue dogs out of Kabul;Councils are set to get grants from the government to rent or buy large homes for thousands of Afghan refugees coming to the UK;Afghanistan faces an ‘humanitarian catastrophe’ this winter, the UN World Food Programme has said as it called for £145million in donations.
The White House tried to put a brave face on Joe Biden’s position, saying the G7 had talked about the ‘continuation of our close coordination’
Boris Johnson today pleaded with the Taliban to allow people to leave Afghanistan after the US has completed its withdrawal on August 31
Joe Biden addresses a virtual meeting of G7 leaders this afternoon. He is said to have spoken for seven minutes
A picture released by the German government of Angela Merkel taking part in the G7 discussion this afternoon
CIA Director William Burns (left) went to Kabul on Monday for a secret meeting with the Taliban’s de facto leader Abdul Ghani Baradar (right)
An aerial view shows the roads heading towards the airport near a Taliban airport filled with cars amid the chaotic rush to flee the country
Diplomats insist that the situation on the ground has improved since the weekend with more people being allowed into the airport, but satellite images showed huge crowds continuing to mass
The US said some 16,000 people were flown out of Kabul between Sunday morning and Monday afternoon, with thousands more due to leave the country today (pictured, a satellite image shows people boarding a military plane)
A satellite image reveals thousands of people standing in huge queues trying to get into Kabul airport with just a week left until evacuation flights out of Afghanistan are due to stop
Hopes that Joe Biden (left) will extend America’s August 31 deadline to leave Afghanistan are fading, with Boris Johnson (right) making a last-ditch plea today
There are still huge crowds around the airport at Kabul with people desperately trying to get out of the country
Taliban fighters stand guard on cargo crates near the airport in these stills from footage taken by ITN News
Pentagon chiefs have poured cold water on an extension by insisting they are ‘focused on getting this done by the end of the month’.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the President was ‘taking this day by day’ and will make his decision on an extension ‘as we go’.
But he said the President still believes ‘we have time between now and August 31 to get out any American who wants to get out’.
The Taliban has warned that any Western military operation in Afghanistan that continued into September would breach a ‘red line’ and would ‘provoke a reaction’.
At a press conference this afternoon the group’s spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid urged the West not to ‘encourage’ highly skilled people to leave Afghanistan.
He warned that the US should not be removing ‘our doctors, engineers, our educated elite’ from the country.
According to translation on Sky News, he said: ‘We need those people in the country, we do not want them out of the country to work in their institutions.’
He urged Afghans to ‘return to their homes and resume their calm everyday lives’ by the Taliban.
Mr Mujahid said crowding at the airport was dangerous and ‘people could lose their lives’.
In an apparent sign of the US administration’s desperation to find a way out of the mess, CIA Director William J Burns is reported to have held a secret meeting in Kabul yesterday with the Taliban’s de facto leader Abdul Ghani Baradar – the highest level contact between the US and extremist regime so far.
The Washington Post said the discussions were thought to be over the US withdrawal deadline.
Mr Wallace said the danger at Kabul airport will rise the closer the evacuation effort gets to the departure deadline.
‘As we get closer to the deadline I think it’s correct to say the security risk goes up,’ he said.
‘It just gets more and more dangerous as add-on groups and other terrorist groups such as IS (so-called Islamic State) would like to be seen to take greater credit, or like to be seen to chase the West out of the airport, that is inevitably going to feed their narrative and their ambitions.
‘We are very mindful that we are very, very vulnerable should these terrorists choose to do something.’
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said this morning it is ‘unlikely’ the deadline will be extended, after the RAF extracted another 2,000 people in the past 24 hours
US marines man a checkpoint during evacuations at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul, on Monday
Taliban guards marshal crowds outside the airport where it is thought 6,500 people are now waiting to board flights
A line of people are led through a military checkpoint at Kabul airport which has witnessed frantic scenes over the last 10 days as people try to flee Afghanistan and Taliban rule
Mr Wallace warned that there was a risk it would turn into a ‘shooting war’ as tensions rise in the coming days.
‘Obviously, all military personnel have the right of self-defence to protect themselves and protect civilians immediately near them,’ he told LBC.
‘I suspect that it will be a mixture of- well I can’t speculate what we would do but we certainly have plans, if we’re attacked, to defend ourselves.
‘I don’t think anyone wants this to turn into a shooting war in the last few days.’
He added: ‘I don’t think they want a shooting war either. They want us out as quickly as possible and we want to get out with as many people as possible.’
The Ministry of Defence said nearly 8,500 people have been evacuated from Afghanistan by the UK since August 13.
In a update on Operation Pitting, the MoD said on Twitter: ‘8,458 people have been evacuated by the UK since 13 August. 5,171 of those people are Afghan Relocation and Assistance Policy claimants. Nine UK military flights have left Kabul in the last 24 hours.’
The US has ramped up airlifts to evacuate more than 17,000 people in a day and Joe Biden has finally ordered troops to rescue Americans outside the airport in a race against time before the August 31 deadline.
Washington pulled off its biggest haul of evacuations since the crisis started over the last 24 hours to early Monday morning, with 28 military jets rescuing around 10,400 people. Another 15 C-17 flights over the next 12 hours brought out another 6,660.
Meanwhile, US Special Operations rescued 16 Americans from an unspecified location around two hours outside Kabul. The Pentagon revealed it was carried out by helicopter without disclosing further details.
It has emerged that Mr Biden told military officials he was reluctant to deploy US forces outside the Kabul airport perimeter over fears of a Black Hawk Down-style tragedy.
In a video conference last week, the president also negatively commented on how quickly the Afghan government fell apart and told commanders he wanted them to be focused on beefing up security at the airport.
During the call, the president alluded to the ‘Black Hawk Down’ tragedy of the Somali Civil War, which saw 18 US personnel killed.
Thousands of Afghans are due to fly out of Kabul airport today as huge crowds continued to swarm military checkpoints (left and right) with the August 31 deadline for mercy flights now looming large
Zakia Khudadadi, 23, would have been the first female to represent Afghanistan at the Paralympics
Mr Tugendhat told BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme: ‘We’re all asking for the same thing. I support the Prime Minister completely on this, but let’s recognise what we’re asking – we’re not just asking the Americans, although clearly they’ll have a major role, we’re actually asking the Taliban, and that’s a really difficult thing, because bluntly, they’re not exactly trustworthy.’
It emerged last night that Western powers are negotiating with the Taliban on the possibility of civilian flights being used in the evacuation, even if the military flights stopped.
German foreign minister Heiko Maas said: ‘We are holding talks with the US, Turkey and other partners with the goal of allowing the airport to continue to operate a civilian operation to fly these people out.’
Germany will ‘also continue to talk to the Taliban about this and will do this after the withdrawal of US troops’, he added.
Mr Wallace said: ‘I don’t think there is any likelihood of staying on after the United States.’
Armed Forces minister James Heappey conceded that the Taliban ‘gets a vote’ on the evacuation deadline.
‘We have the military power to just stay there by force, but I don’t know that the humanitarian mission we’re embarked on… is helped by Kabul becoming a war zone,’ he said.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the President was ‘taking this day by day’ and will make his decision on an extension ‘as we go’
Asked about the Taliban spokesman’s remarks, the Prime Minister’s spokesman said: ‘I don’t think we’ve had any direct communication to that end.’
He added that ‘discussions on the ground’ have been held with the Taliban over extending the deadline.
Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said: ‘We’re focused on getting this done before the end of the month.’
But he said the US would ‘absolutely consider the views’ of allies.