August 30, 2021 Afghanistan-Taliban news | CNN

August 30 Afghanistan-Taliban news

general Kenneth mckenzie
Pentagon announces completion of Afghanistan withdrawal
02:37 - Source: CNN

What we're covering

  • The Pentagon announced the last US military planes have left Afghanistan, marking the end of the United States’ longest war.
  • The departure is the first time in nearly two decades that the US and its allies have not had troops on the ground.
  • The evacuation effort met President Biden’s withdrawal deadline, but has been marked by chaotic and bloody events. More than 170 people were killed, including 13 American service members, in last week’s attack near Kabul’s airport.

Our live coverage of the US’ withdrawal from Afghanistan has moved here.

51 Posts

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin says he's "proud of the part" the US played in the war in Afghanistan

US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin arrives at the US Capitol before briefing members of the House of Representatives on August 24 in Washington, DC.

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said he is “proud of those with whom I served and led” in a statement marking the end of the conflict in Afghanistan.

Austin said the evacuation effort was “historic” and that “no other military in the world could accomplish what we and our allies and partners did in such a short span of time.” 

Here's the last US soldier leaving Afghanistan

In this photo tweeted by the US Department of Defense, Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commanding general of the All American Division XVIII Airborne Corps, boards a US Air Force C-17 on August 30.

The Department of Defense has tweeted a picture of Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne Division, boarding a C-17 to depart Kabul.

He was the last soldier to depart the country. 

On Monday, Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie, the top general of US Central Command, told reporters that Donahue and the top US diplomat in Kabul, Charge d’Affaires Ross Wilson, were the last two US officials to step off of Afghanistan soil and onto a US military aircraft out of Afghanistan.

“On the last airplane out was Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd airborne division and my grand force commander there, and he was accompanied by our charge Ambassador Ross Wilson, so they came out together,” McKenzie said.

“The state and defense team came out on the last aircraft and were in fact the last people to step on the ground, step on the airplane,” he added.

US and allies working to reopen Kabul airport "as soon as possible," Blinken says

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the US and its allies are discussing ways to reopen the airport in Kabul as quickly as possible to facilitate safe travel out of Afghanistan for Americans, US legal permanent residents and Afghans who worked with the US to leave the country.

“We discussed how we will work together to facilitate safe travel out of Afghanistan, including by reopening Kabul’s civilian airport soon as possible,” Blinken said.

He continued: “And we very much appreciate the efforts of Qatar and Turkey, in particular, to make this happen. This would enable a small number of daily charter flights, which is a key for anyone who wants to depart from Afghanistan moving forward.” 

Secretary of state outlines US' next steps in Afghanistan: "A new diplomatic mission has begun"

Secretary of State Antony Blinken called the United States’ next steps in Afghanistan “a new chapter,” saying the country will now lead a diplomatic mission with the nation after it withdrew all of its military forces.

Blinken outlined the US’ plans for the “days and weeks ahead,” including suspending their diplomatic presence in Kabul as of today and creating a new team.

“First, we built a new team to help lead this new mission. As of today, we suspended our diplomatic presence in Kabul and transferred our operations to Doha, Qatar, which will soon be formally notified to Congress. Given the uncertain security environment and political situation in Afghanistan, it was the prudent step to take,” he said.

Blinken said that for the time being, the US will use this post in Doha to “manage our diplomacy with Afghanistan, including consular affairs, administrating humanitarian assistance, and working with allies, partners and regional and international stakeholders to coordinate our engagement and messaging to the Taliban.”

The secretary of state thanked the top US diplomat in Kabul, Charge d’Affaires Ross Wilson, for his work in Afghanistan, saying he has “done exceptional, courageous work during a highly challenging time.”

Blinken says "small number" of Americans remain in Afghanistan

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Monday that State Department believes there is “a small number of Americans, under 200 and likely closer to 100, who remain in Afghanistan and want to leave.”

“We’re trying to determine exactly how many. We’re going through manifests and calling and texting through our lists,” Blinken said in remarks at the State Department. The top US diplomat noted that there are residents of Afghanistan who have US passports who were trying to determine if they should leave.

Blinken said the State Department would help Americans leave no matter when they decide that they wish to depart.

CENTCOM Commander Gen. Kenneth McKenzie said earlier Monday that no American citizens were evacuated on the last five flights out of Afghanistan.

Secretary of state says completing the withdrawal from Afghanistan "was a sacred duty"

On the heels of the United States officially completing the withdrawal from Afghanistan, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken lauded the effort of the operation, calling it “one of the most difficult in our nation’s history.”

Speaking from the State Department, Blinked referenced the various challenges of the mission, noting that what the United States achieved was a “feat of logistics and coordination under some of the most challenging circumstances imaginable.”

With the Pentagon announcing that the last US military planes have left country, the United States’ longest war formally came to a close, an achievement that relied on the efforts of countless Americans, both in Afghanistan and stateside.

Calling the evacuation operation “very personal,” the secretary of state referenced the countless lives lost throughout the war.

“We also lost cherished members of our foreign service community in Afghanistan,” he said, adding “we’ll never forget them.”

Rescuing Americans and Afghan partners alike became “more than just a high stakes assignment for our team,” said Blinken. Instead, he called it a “sacred duty,” one conducted on a global stage, allowing the world to see how American “diplomats rose to the challenge with determination and heart.”

NOW: Secretary of state speaks after US announces completion of Afghanistan withdrawal

Secretary of State Antony Blinken is delivering remarks on Afghanistan after the Pentagon announced that the last US military planes have left country – marking the end of the United States’ longest war.

During his remarks tonight, Blinken thanked the US’ allies and partners.

The exit also marks the first time in nearly two decades that the US and its allies have not had troops on the ground in Afghanistan. After $2 trillion in spending and nearly 2,000 US troops killed in action, the pullout also raises questions about the utility of the 20-year war.

With no US diplomats remaining in the country a senior State Department official said that they expected the US Embassy in Kabul to suspend embassy operations upon the end of the military retrograde but said “that doesn’t mean that we are suspending any commitments to American citizens in Afghanistan, to at risk Afghans, to the Afghan people.”

As of Monday, more than 122,000 people had been airlifted from Hamid Karzai International Airport since July, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters, including 5,400 Americans.

Some US military equipment removed from Afghanistan and other items disabled, top general says

Some of the US military equipment used in Afghanistan was removed from the country and other items were disabled, Gen. Frank McKenzie, commander of US Central Command, told reporters during a briefing on Monday.

The US military kept some equipment operating until nearly the end of the withdrawal to protect US forces and people at Kabul international airport, McKenzie said. That equipment was “demilitarized,” McKenzie said, meaning it was disabled in a way that makes it impossible to use. 

As an example, McKenzie said he advanced C-RAM defensive system, which stands for Counter-Rocket, Artillery, and Mortar, was left at Hamid Karzai International Airport. The automated C-RAM system, which detects incoming fire and destroys it with a machine gun, was activated just one day before the withdrawal was complete, when militants fired approximately five rockets at the airport. Two rockets that would have landed on the field were intercepted by C-RAM. 

The US military also left behind about 70 MRAPS or Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicles, 27 Humvees, which are tactical vehicles, and 73 aircrafts at the Kabul airport. This equipment was disabled, McKenzie said. A “total of 73 aircraft, those aircraft will never fly again when we left, they’ll never be operated by anyone,” McKenzie said.

Biden thanks US forces: "Now, our 20-year military presence in Afghanistan has ended"

US Army soldiers assigned to the 10th Mountain Division stand security at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on August 16.

President Biden thanked the final US forces serving in Afghanistan for executing the “dangerous retrograde from Afghanistan as scheduled,” with no further loss of American lives, in a statement released Monday evening, making the end of the United States’ longest war.

“The past 17 days have seen our troops execute the largest airlift in US history, evacuating over 120,000 US citizens, citizens of our allies, and Afghan allies of the United States. They have done it with unmatched courage, professionalism, and resolve,” the President wrote in the statement released Monday night. 

Biden said he will address the nation on Tuesday on his decision to not extend America’s presence in Afghanistan past Aug. 31, but said in his statement that “it was the unanimous recommendation of the Joint Chiefs and of all of our commanders on the ground to end our airlift mission as planned.”

The President also made clear he intends to hold the Taliban accountable to their commitment to allow those seeking to leave the country will be able to do so safely.

“The Taliban has made commitments on safe passage and the world will hold them to their commitments. It will include ongoing diplomacy in Afghanistan and coordination with partners in the region to reopen the airport allowing for continued departure for those who want to leave and delivery of humanitarian assistance to the people of Afghanistan,” the President wrote.

Earlier Monday, CENTCOM Commander Gen. Kenneth McKenzie acknowledged that the US military “did not get everybody out that we wanted to get out.”

Biden ended his statement “with a moment of gratitude for the sacrifice of the 13 service members in Afghanistan who gave their lives last week to save tens of thousands,” naming each of the American service members killed.

Top diplomat and military commander were the last two American officials to depart Afghanistan

The last two US officials to step off of Afghanistan soil and onto a US military aircraft out of Afghanistan were Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne Division, and the top US diplomat in Kabul, Charge d’Affaires Ross Wilson, Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie, the top general of US Central Command, told reporters during a briefing on Monday.

“The state and defense team came out on the last aircraft and were in fact the last people to step on the ground, step on the airplane,” he added.

FAA prohibits US flights over most of Afghanistan

The Federal Aviation Administration is prohibiting US civil operators, pilots and US-registered civil aircraft from operating at any altitude over much of Afghanistan, according to a statement sent Monday. 

“US civil operators may continue to use one high-altitude jet route near the far eastern border for overflights. Any U.S. civil aircraft operator that wants to fly into/out of or over Afghanistan must receive prior authorization from the FAA,” the statement said.

Shortly before, the FAA issued a notice to airmen, saying that effective immediately, Hamid Karzai International Airport is “uncontrolled.” 

Gen. Frank McKenzie, commander of US Central Command, announced Monday that the last US military planes have left Afghanistan. The US departure marks the end of a fraught, chaotic and bloody exit from the United States’ longest war.

Taliban "very pragmatic" and "businesslike" in final moments of US presence, top general says

Gen. Frank McKenzie, the top general of US Central Command, said the Taliban have been “very pragmatic and very businesslike” during the US withdrawal from Afghanistan. 

McKenzie said that one of the last things Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue did before leaving Afghanistan was “talk to the Taliban commander.”

The US did coordinate with the Taliban commander on when the US was leaving, “but there was no discussion of turning anything over of that at all,” McKenzie said.

“We did not turn it over to the Taliban. General Donahue, one of the last things he did before leaving was talk to the Taliban commander that he had been coordinating with, as soon as, about the time we were going to leave just to let them know that we were leaving. But there was no discussion of turning anything over of that at all,” McKenzie said.

Celebratory gunfire heard in Kabul after departure of last US aircraft

Parts of Kabul erupted in celebratory gunfire after the last US C-17 aircraft lifted off from Hamid Karzai International Airport right before midnight local time on Monday. 

A local reporter working with CNN heard heavy gunfire and saw tracer fire arcing across the sky shortly after the last aircraft departed.  

Video viewed by CNN showed Taliban fighters on a street in the capital firing automatic weapons into the air. 

US military conducted "largest non-combatant evacuation" in its history, Pentagon says

An air crew prepares to load evacuees aboard an aircraft in support of the Afghanistan evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport on August 21 in Kabul, Afghanistan. 

The US military conducted the “largest non-combatant evacuation” in the military’s history over the past 18-day period starting on Aug.14, Gen. Frank McKenzie, the top general of US Central Command said on Monday.

In the 18 days, the US military evacuated 79,000 civilians from Hamid Karzai International Airport, he added.

Out of the 79,000 evacuated, that included 6,000 Americans and more than 73,000 third-country and Afghan civilians, McKenzie said.

“This last category includes Special Immigrant Visas, consular staff, at-risk Afghans and their families,” he said.

“In total, US and coalition aircraft combined to evacuate more than 123,000 civilians which were all enabled by US military service members who were securing and operating the airfield,” Mckenzie explained. 

During the evacuation mission, the US military evacuated “more than 7,500 civilians” on average over the 18 days, including evacuating 19,000 on a single day during the mission, McKenzie said. 

“The numbers I provided represent an accomplishment, but they do not do justice to the determination, the grit, the flexibility, and the professionalism of the men and women of the US military and our coalition partners who were able to rapidly combine efforts and evacuate so many under such difficult conditions,” he said.

Top general acknowledges US "did not get everybody out that we wanted to get out"

Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie, the top general of US Central Command, acknowledged that the US military “did not get everybody out that we wanted to get out.” 

“I want to emphasize again that simply because we have left that doesn’t mean the opportunities for both Americans that are in Afghanistan who want to leave and Afghans who want to leave. They will not be denied that opportunity,” McKenzie added.

No Americans evacuated on last 5 flights out of Afghanistan, top US general in Middle East says

CENTCOM Commander Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie said Monday that no American citizens made it on the final five evacuation flights leaving Kabul, meaning that Americans who may have wished to leave Afghanistan have been left on the ground. 

McKenzie said there were no evacuees left at the airport when the final flights left.

A senior State Department official said earlier Monday the Department believed there were fewer than 250 American citizens who may wish to leave Afghanistan.

“We believe there’s still a small number who remain, and we’re trying to determine exactly how many,” the official told reporters Monday. “We are going through manifests of people who have departed, we are calling and texting and WhatsApping and emailing our lists, in an effort to have a more concrete figure regarding how many Americans may remain.”

The official declined to say how the US intends to help Americans and others who wish to leave after the US government is no longer present on the ground, saying that Secretary of State Antony Blinken will discuss it in his remarks on Monday evening.

Blinken on Sunday said that “our commitment to continue to help people leave Afghanistan who want to leave and who are not out by September 1st, that endures. There’s no deadline on that effort. “

The last US C-17 aircraft lifted off from Kabul just before the US withdrawal deadline, Pentagon says

The top US general for the Middle East, Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie, said the last US C-17 lifted off from Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport “on August 30th, this afternoon, at 3:29 p.m. East Coast time, and the last manned aircraft is now clearing the airspace above Afghanistan.”

The local Kabul time for the last US aircraft liftoff was 11:59 p.m. Aug. 30, the US deadline for withdrawal was Aug. 31.

Pentagon announces complete US withdrawal from Afghanistan 

A press briefing is held at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, on August 30.

Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie, commander of US Central Command, announced the completion of US withdrawal from Afghanistan during a Pentagon news conference on Monday.

McKenzie added that the US will continue the diplomatic evacuation mission.

“While the military evacuation is complete, the diplomatic mission to ensure additional US citizens and eligible Afghans, who want to leave, continues,” he said.

“Tonight’s withdrawal signifies both the end of the military component of the evacuation, but also the end of the nearly 20-year mission that began in Afghanistan shortly after September 11, 2001. It’s a mission that brought Osama bin Laden to a just end, along with many of his al Qaeda co-conspirators. It was not a cheap mission. The cost was 2,461 US Service members and civilians killed and more than 20,000 who were injured. Sadly, that kills 13 service members who were killed last week by an ISIS-K suicide bomber. We honor their sacrifice today as we remember their heroic accomplishments,” he continued.

McKenzie also highlighted the sacrifices of those who served in Afghanistan and his personal connection to the mission.

“No words from me could possibly capture the full measure of sacrifices and accomplishments of those who served, nor the emotions they’re feeling at this moment. But I will say that I’m proud that both my son and I have been a part of it,” he said.

The last US military planes have left Afghanistan, marking the end of the United States’ longest war

Planes are seen on the tarmac at the airport in Kabul late on August 30.

The last US military planes left Afghanistan with troops and the remaining core diplomatic staff, Commander of US Central Command, Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie announced Monday at the Pentagon. 

The US departure marks the end of a fraught, chaotic and bloody exit from the United States’ longest war.

The departure marks the first time in nearly two decades that the US and its allies have not had troops on the ground in Afghanistan after $2 trillion in spending and nearly 2,000 US troops killed in action.

A senior State Department official said Monday that the State Department will not have civilians on the ground once the US military leaves Afghanistan. “We are not going to have civilians on the ground once the military has left,” they said. 

The official said that they expected the US Embassy in Kabul to suspend embassy operations upon the end of the military retrograde, but said “that doesn’t mean that we are suspending any commitments to American citizens in Afghanistan, to at risk Afghans, to the Afghan people.”

UN Security Council approves resolution to create "safe passage" zone from Kabul after US withdrawal

The UN Security Council has approved a resolution for creating a “safe passage” zone for people seeking to leave Afghanistan from Kabul’s airport after the US withdrawal from the country.

The Council is relying on the Taliban to secure a safe passage out for Afghans and foreign nationals seeking to leave the country.

 Here is a breakdown of the vote:

  • 13 votes in favor
  • 2 abstentions, including China
  • None opposed

Following the adoption of the UN resolution, UN Director at Human Rights Watch Louis Charbonneau issued a statement urging the Taliban to uphold human rights and he called on other countries “do their part by speedily processing asylum claims and issuing visas for at-risk Afghans so they can resettle.”

Read more

The last US military planes have left Afghanistan, marking the end of the United States’ longest war
Biden administration pledges ‘safe passage’ for Americans in Afghanistan after withdrawal deadline
US carries out Kabul airstrike targeting suspected ISIS-K bomber posing ‘imminent’ threat to airport
Biden attends dignified transfer at Dover Air Force Base for those killed in Afghanistan

Read more

The last US military planes have left Afghanistan, marking the end of the United States’ longest war
Biden administration pledges ‘safe passage’ for Americans in Afghanistan after withdrawal deadline
US carries out Kabul airstrike targeting suspected ISIS-K bomber posing ‘imminent’ threat to airport
Biden attends dignified transfer at Dover Air Force Base for those killed in Afghanistan