UK rules out returning troops to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan
UK defence secretary says the Talibanâs rapid takeover is a sign of the international communityâs âfailureâ.
British and NATO forces will not return to Afghanistan to fight the Taliban, the United Kingdomâs defence secretary said, after the group took control of Kabul following a blistering nationwide offensive.
Ben Wallace told Sky News on Monday that it was ânot on the cards that weâre going to go backâ as reports of bloodshed in the Afghan capital fuelled concerns of a looming humanitarian crisis.
âI acknowledge that the Taliban are in control of the country,â Wallace said.
The groupâs rapid takeover was a âfailure of the international communityâ, Wallace later told the BBC, describing the 20-year-long intervention led by the United States as a job only half-done.
âAll of us know that Afghanistan is not finished. Itâs an unfinished problem for the world and the world needs to help it,â he said.
Wallace pointed to the Talibanâs removal from power after the September 11, 2001, attacks and the death of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden as evidence that âhalf the mission ⦠was entirely successfulâ, but warned of an impending threat to global security as the group resurged.
He has previously accused former US President Donald Trump of having brokered a ârotten dealâ with the Taliban that allowed their return against the backdrop of a hasty withdrawal of foreign forces.
âIâm afraid when you deal with a country like Afghanistan, that is 1,000 years of history effectively and civil war, you manage its problems and you might have to manage it for 100 years,â Wallace said.
âItâs not something that you just rock in, rock out and expect something to be fixed.â
Evacuations ongoingAs chaos gripped Kabul airport, Wallace said the military side of the airport was secure and that the UK was doing everything it could to evacuate British citizens and Afghans with links to the UK, having relocated its embassy to the airport from the capital.
Five people were reported killed at the airport on Monday, witnesses told Reuters, as hundreds of people tried to flee Afghanistan by entering planes without tickets.
In extraordinary scenes, some Afghans were even seen clinging onto the exterior of planes in desperate attempts to leave.
âOur target is ⦠about 1,200 to 1,500 exit a day in the capacity of our aeroplanes, and weâll keep that flow,â Wallace said.
The UK last month withdrew most of its 750 soldiers remaining in Afghanistan as part of the US-led pullback of foreign forces, but last week announced that 600 soldiers would return to help with repatriation efforts.
Wallace said 370 embassy staff and British citizens were flown out on Saturday and Sunday, with 782 Afghans scheduled to leave in the next 24 to 36 hours.
Parliament has been recalled on Wednesday to discuss the situation, including asylum and support for Afghan nationals who have fled the country.
Asked how he would feel if he saw the Taliban flag flying over the former British embassy building in Kabul, Wallace said: âItâs not the embassy any more, we have left that location ⦠so itâs now just a building.â
But he admitted that âsymbolically, itâs not what any of us wantedâ.
Wallace also said it was not yet the right time to decide on whether to recognise the Taliban as the Afghan government.
âI think there is a lot of more to come before those decisions are made,â he said. âThe proof of the pudding will be, obviously, in their actions rather than their rhetoric.â
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