Rockets were fired at Kabul’s airport on Monday morning where US troops were racing to complete their withdrawal from Afghanistan and evacuate allies under the threat of Islamic State group attacks.
Africa Today News, New York had earlier reported that President Joe Biden has set a deadline of Tuesday to withdraw all US forces from Afghanistan, drawing to a close his nation’s longest military conflict, which commenced in retaliation for the September 11 attacks.
It would be recalled that the return of the hardline Islamist Taliban movement, which was toppled in 2001 but took back power a fortnight ago, triggered an exodus of terrified people aboard US-led evacuation flights.
Those flights, which have taken more than 120,000 people out of Kabul airport, will officially end on Tuesday when the last of the thousands of American troops pull out.
However, it is pertinent to note that the US forces are now focused chiefly on flying themselves and American diplomats out safely.
The Islamic State group, rivals of the Taliban, pose the biggest threat to the withdrawal after carrying out a suicide bomb attack at the perimeter of the airport late last week that claimed more than 100 lives, including those of 13 US troops.
Biden had warned more attacks were highly likely and the United States said it carried out an air strike on Sunday night in Kabul on an IS-prepared car bomb.
That was followed on Monday morning by rockets being fired at the airport.
The White House confirmed there had been a rocket attack directed at the airport, but said operations there were ‘uninterrupted’.
‘The President… has reconfirmed his order that commanders redouble their efforts to prioritise doing whatever is necessary to protect our forces on the ground,‘ the White House statement said.
A suspected US drone strike had hit the car, about two kilometres (1.2 miles) from the airport.
A Taliban official at the scene said he believed five rockets had been fired, and all were destroyed by the airport’s missile defence systems.
‘Since the Americans have taken control of the airport, we can’t sleep properly,’ Abdullah, who lives near the airport and gave only one name, told reporters.
‘It is either gun firing, rockets, sirens or sounds of huge planes that disturb us. And now that they are being directly targeted, it can put our lives in danger.’
The United States said the airstrike on Sunday night on the car bomb had eliminated another threat from the Islamic State jihadists.
AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK