USA påberopte seg støtte etter NATO traktatens artikkel 5 vedr. mutual support.
Dette bildet sakset fra DefenseNews sier også mye:
(Red.)
These Two Images Represent The Beginning And The End Of America's War In Afghanistan
TYLER ROGOWAY View Tyler Rogoway's Articles
The two images above aren't separated that much in
terms of where they were taken geographically, but they deviate greatly in
terms of how far apart they were taken in time. They represent the operation
that would send the first Americans into Afghanistan to kick off the war there,
as well as the greater Global War On Terror as we now know it, and the last
American soldier to step foot on Afghan soil. The first image was taken on
September 19th, 2001, the other was taken today, August 30th, 2021. They are now
the alpha and the omega of America's war in Afghanistan, visually speaking.
The image taken on
September 19th, 2001 shows CIA operatives aboard a Mi-17 helicopter in
Uzbekistan. In the following days, the CIA would make its first clandestine
flight into Afghanistan. We did two separate stories on the circumstances
surrounding this historic image, which you can check out here and here, but this is our description of it, specifically:
The image shows the open rear of a Russian-built
Mi-17 with heavily armed men sitting on ammunition cans in the back with just
ropes tied around them to ensure they don't fall to their death if they slip
out the back during flight. The mission depicted took place on September 19th,
2001, just eight days after the attacks on 9/11. The CIA says it was to pick up
$3M in cash in three cardboard boxes. That money would be used to pay the
Northern Alliance to spearhead the fight against the Taliban and to buy the
allegiance of local warlords.
CIA
CIA operators hang out the back of an Mi-17. The Nestle box, one of three, is full of cash.
This was the beginning of
America's mission in Afghanistan. On September 26th, CIA operatives would fly
into Afghanistan to make contact with tribal warlords and the leadership
of the Northern Alliance, which opposed the
Taliban. Millions in cash was used to buy their loyalty and jumpstart robust
military operations. This operation, dubbed "Jawbreaker," would spark
what became a blitz across the country spearheaded by U.S. special operators,
American airpower, and the Northern Alliance, and would bring about the
Taliban's fall from power. By November of 2001, the Taliban would be chased
from Kabul. By December, they would no longer control any stronghold in the
country and would subsequently morph into an enduring insurgent force.
AMERICA'S 20-YEAR WAR IN
AFGHANISTAN ENDS AFTER LAST TROOPS DEPART KABUL (UPDATED)By Joseph Trevithick
and Tyler RogowayPosted in THE WAR ZONE
CIA RELEASES PHOTO TAKEN JUST
BEFORE ITS OPERATIVES FIRST ENTERED AFGHANISTAN AFTER 9/11By Tyler
RogowayPosted in THE WAR ZONE
HERE'S WHAT THE U.S. MILITARY
LEFT BEHIND AT KABUL AIRPORTBy Joseph
TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
CIA PUT THE FIRST MI-17 CHOPPER
IT FLEW INTO AFGHANISTAN AFTER 9/11 IN A MUSEUM YOU CAN'T VISITBy Joseph
TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
THE STATE DEPARTMENT HAS
ABANDONED ITS CH-46 HELICOPTERS IN AFGHANISTANBy Joseph
Trevithick and Tyler RogowayPosted in THE WAR ZONE
Fast forward nearly 20
years and we have what will become the quintessential image of the war's end. It shows the commander
of the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division, General Christopher Donohue, stepping
onto a C-17 under the cover of darkness. He had overseen the evacuation
operations and was the last person aboard the last transport to leave the
country at 11:59 pm on August 30th, 2021, ending the U.S. military's presence
in the war-torn country.
DOD
General Donohue was the last U.S. serviceperson out of Afghanistan.
In the time between the
two photos, there were incredible examples of kindness and super-human bravery,
as well as inhuman cruelty and evil. The breakdown of the dead reads as such,
according to a recent piece by the Associated Press:
American service members
killed in Afghanistan through April: 2,461.
U.S. contractors: 3,846.
Afghan national military
and police: 66,000.
Other allied service
members, including from other NATO member states: 1,144.
Afghan civilians: 47,245.
Taliban and other
opposition fighters: 51,191.
Aid workers: 444.
Journalists: 72.
In addition, countless
people were wounded, some severely, including over 20,000 American troops.
Massive amounts of treasure was spent, as well. Some estimates put the cost of
America's war in Afghanistan at $1 trillion and as high as over $2 trillion.
On behalf of our team to all of the 800,000
service people who served in Afghanistan over the years, and to those who
served there in any other capacity, as well as their family members, we want to
thank you for all your efforts and sacrifices. While America's overall military
mission, and the strategies that defined it, in that country will be debated
for many years to come, we must remember that the homeland never received
another terror attack emanating from Afghanistan. I don't think many would have
predicted that in the dark days following 9/11.
And even though the Taliban may be back in control
of Afghanistan after 20 years of blood and treasure spent there, if there is
one thing we should have learned over the last two decades, it is that
Afghanistan's future is anything but set in stone.
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