Advertisement
Advertisement
Afghanistan after the US withdrawal
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
President Joe Biden watches as a carry team moves a transfer case containing the remains of a Marine, one of 13 who died in a Kabul attack on August 26. Photo: AP

Afghanistan timeline: America’s last days

  • Joe Biden’s deadline for ending the US evacuation from Afghanistan is on Tuesday
  • Events over the past month have created a chaotic situation for America’s exit

On Tuesday, August 31, the United States plans to withdraw its last troops out of Afghanistan. Here are the main developments since the Taliban seized Kabul, taking power again in Afghanistan after two decades of war.

Lightning takeover

On August 15, Taliban fighters appear on the edge of Kabul after a lightning offensive launched in May as US and Nato troops began to withdraw.

In the space of 10 days, they seized city after city across the country with little or no resistance.

Television images show the Taliban taking the presidential palace.

President Ashraf Ghani flees the country and says on Facebook that the “Taliban have won” and that he left to avoid a “flood of bloodshed”.

Rockets fly in Kabul as US evacuations wind down

Airport chaos

Frightened people besiege Kabul airport, the only exit route from the country. Chaos breaks out on the tarmac as people try to rush aircraft.

All military and civilian flights are halted, before resuming Monday evening.

‘Terrorism sanctuary’ fears

China becomes the first country to say it is ready to deepen “friendly and cooperative” relations with the Taliban.

It later accuses Washington of “leaving an awful mess”.

The UN Security Council says the country must not become a breeding ground for terrorism.

Under growing criticism, President Joe Biden insists he has no regrets and emphasises that US troops cannot defend a nation whose leaders “gave up and fled”.

02:52

US retaliates for Kabul airport attack with drone strikes on Afghan capital and border region

US retaliates for Kabul airport attack with drone strikes on Afghan capital and border region

Go back to work 

The Taliban tell civil servants in Kabul to resume their duties “without any fear”. Some shops reopen and evacuation flights from the city’s airport restart.

‘Women can work’

At their first news conference since seizing power, spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid says the Taliban will let “women work in accordance with the principles of Islam”.

Girls return to school in Taliban-held Herat.

EU ‘must talk’ to Taliban 

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell says the bloc will have to talk to the Taliban.

ICC: Possible violations

Karim Khan, chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, says reported crimes during the Taliban advance may amount to violations of international law.

Stay or go? The tough choices for Chinese businesspeople in Afghanistan

‘Collapse’ of Afghanistan

Russian President Vladimir Putin calls on the global community to prevent the “collapse” of Afghanistan following the Taliban takeover.

Nato says its allies have deployed enough planes to airlift foreign nationals and their Afghan colleagues from Kabul but ground access to the airport is a “big challenge”.

Taliban leader returns 

Within hours of Taliban co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar returning to Afghanistan, the group says it will be “different” this time. It will pardon its enemies and women will not have to wear the all-enveloping burka.

‘Difficult’ airlift

Biden says he cannot guarantee the final outcome of the emergency evacuation from Kabul’s airport, calling it one of the most “difficult” airlift operations ever.

The US tells its citizens to avoid travelling to the airport because of “potential security threats” near its gates.

Pressure builds on Biden to extend his August 31 deadline to complete the rescue missions, with EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell saying “it’s mathematically impossible” to complete the evacuations by that date.

Taliban commando fighters in Lashkar Gah, Helmand province. Photo: AP

Seven deaths 

Britain’s defence ministry says that seven Afghans died in crowds in Kabul, without giving the circumstances. The previous day Sky News aired footage of at least three bodies outside the airport.

Taliban blames US

The Taliban blames the US for the dramatic scenes at Kabul airport, an official saying that “there is peace and calm all over the country, but there is chaos only at Kabul airport”.

Resistance? 

There have since been flickers of resistance with some ex-government troops gathering in the Panjsher Valley, north of Kabul.

The National Resistance Front is prepared for a “long-term conflict” but is also still seeking to negotiate with the Taliban about an inclusive government, the movement’s spokesman Ali Maisam Nazary says.

Why Afghanistan is not the ‘Graveyard of Empires’

Taliban fighters

Hundreds of Taliban fighters are heading to the Panjsher valley “to control it, after local state officials refused to hand it over peacefully”, the group wrote on its Arabic Twitter account.

‘Red line’

On the 23rd, the Taliban describe the August 31 deadline for evacuations as a “red line”.

On the 24th, Biden says he has decided to stick to his August 31 deadline to pull American forces out of Afghanistan, after talks with G7 counterparts.

On the 25th, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken says the Taliban will allow Americans and at-risk Afghans to leave after August 31.

Suicide bombing

A suicide bomb on August 26 claimed by Islamic State rips through crowds outside Kabul airport, killing scores of civilians as well as 13 US service members.

The following day, Britain, France and Spain become among the latest countries to end their evacuations from Kabul.

More than 100,000 people have been flown out of the country since August 14, according to the US government.

4