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Death Toll Rises to 103 in Kabul Attacks

  • A Taliban member is seen at the explosion site near the Kabul airport in Afghanistan, Aug. 27, 2021.

    A Taliban member is seen at the explosion site near the Kabul airport in Afghanistan, Aug. 27, 2021. | Photo: Xinhua

Published 27 August 2021
Opinion

The number of U.S. service members killed in the attacks has risen to 13, with 18 more injured troops currently in the process of being flown out of Afghanistan.

U.S. President Joe Biden said Thursday the United States will avenge militarily the bombing attacks in Kabul that have killed at least 103 people, adding the ongoing evacuation in Afghanistan will continue uninterrupted.

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"We will respond with force and precision in our time, in a place we choose in a manner of our choosing," Biden said when delivering remarks from the White House, following a deadly suicide bombing attack at Hamid Karzai Airport.

The number of U.S. service members killed in the attacks has risen to 13, with 18 more injured troops currently in the process of being flown out of Afghanistan. The blast at the airport was followed by another one at the adjacent Baron Hotel, whose details are being figured out by the U.S. military.

The Afghan Ministry of Public Health previously confirmed the attacks had resulted in over 60 deaths and 140 injuries among Afghans, and were claimed by ISIS-K, a radical affiliate of the Islamic State. Active in Afghanistan, the terror group has been fighting enemies including the Taliban.

Biden said he had ordered U.S. commanders to "strike ISIS-K assets, leadership and facilities... These ISIS terrorists will not win. We will rescue the Americans. We will get our Afghan allies out. And our mission will go on," he added.

Answering a reporter's question as to whether he'll deploy additional troops to Afghanistan in the wake of the attacks, Biden said if the military needs additional force, "I will grant it." Asked about whether he considered it a mistake to depend on the Taliban to secure the perimeter of the Kabul airport given the mass casualty bombings, Biden said it's not a matter of trust but rather the Taliban's "self-interest" that led to U.S. coordination with the Taliban.

The president said he has thus far been shown no evidence of collusion between the Taliban and ISIS in masterminding both what happened in the morning and what was expected in the future. The Taliban issued a statement condemning the attacks in their aftermath.

Close to the end of his White House appearance, Biden said he would "bear responsibility for fundamentally all that's happened" during the chaotic withdrawal in Afghanistan, while also shifting the blame on former President Donald Trump, whose administration negotiated a deal with the Taliban to get all U.S. forces out of Afghanistan by May 1, 2021.

The attacks came as the United States has been scrambling to evacuate Americans and its Afghan partners from Afghanistan since the Taliban entered Kabul on Aug. 15. After seizing Kabul, the Taliban said all U.S. troops must leave Afghanistan no later than Aug. 31, and Biden has upheld that deadline.

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