UK rules out returning troops to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan

UK rules out returning troops to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan
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British and NATO forces won’t return to Afghanistan to fight the Taliban, the United Kingdom’s defence clerk said, after the group took control of Kabul following a blistering civil descent.

Ben Wallace told Sky News on Monday that it was “ not on the cards that we ’re going to go back” as reports of bloodshed in the Afghan capital fuelled enterprises of a brewing philanthropic extremity.
I admit that the Taliban are in control of the country,” Wallace said.

The group’s rapid-fire preemption was a “ failure of the transnational community”, Wallace latterly told the BBC, describing the 20- time-long intervention led by the United States as a job only half- done.
“ All of us know that Afghanistan isn’t finished. It’s an untreated problem for the world and the world needs to help it,” he said.
Wallace refocused to the Taliban’s junking from power after the September 11, 2001, attacks and the death of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden as substantiation that “ half the charge … was entirely successful”, but advised of an impending trouble to global security as the group resurged.

He has preliminarily indicted former US President Donald Trump of having brokered a “ rotten deal” with the Taliban that allowed their return against the background of a hasty pullout of foreign forces.
I ’m hysterical when you deal with a country like Afghanistan, that’s times of history effectively and civil war, you manage its problems and you might have to manage it for 100 times,” Wallace said.

“ It’s not commodity that you just gemstone in, gemstone out and anticipate commodity to be fixed.”
As chaos gripped Kabul field, Wallace said the military side of the field was secure and that the UK was doing everything it could to void British citizens and Afghans with links to the UK, having dislocated its delegacy to the field from the capital.

Five people were reported killed at the field on Monday, substantiations told Reuters, as hundreds of people tried to flee Afghanistan by entering aeroplanes without tickets.
In extraordinary scenes, some Afghans were indeed seen adhering onto the surface of aeroplanes in hopeless attempts to leave.

“ Our target is … about to exit a day in the capacity of our planes, and we ’ll keep that inflow,” Wallace said.
The UK last month withdrew utmost of its 750 dogfaces remaining in Afghanistan as part of the US- led withdrawal of foreign forces, but last week blazoned that 600 dogfaces would return to help with extradition sweats.

Wallace said 370 delegacy staff and British citizens were flown out on Saturday and Sunday, with 782 Afghans listed to leave in the coming 24 to 36 hours.

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