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vwbr Chavez Threatens To Throw U.S. Envoy Out - CharlesteGeork - 12-26-2024

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There is bedlam at the airport in Kabul, with thousands of Afghans struggling to get on the next plane out, a day after Taliban fighters took control of the capital.The Taliban s sudden capture of Kabul ndash; less than 20 years after U.S. forces overthrew their government ndash; has shocked the world. Many observers compare the scenes t nike air force o the fall of South Vietnam in 1975. At least five people have been killed in the chaos. By evening yesterday, President Ashraf Ghani ndash; who only the day before had vowed to keep fighting ndash; fled the country. He said he left to avoid b dunk panda loodshed. His countrymen are calling him a coward.Much of the population is in hiding, afraid of what s next. Bedlam at the airport in Kabul, as Afghans fleeing the Taliban scrambled to climb onto a C-17 taking off. Sudhir Chaudhary/Twitter Taliban fighters soon declared an end to the war, from the comfort of the presidential palace, hours after strolling into Kabul ndash; just 11 days after launching an offensive, and overwhelming U.S.-trained Afghan forces in cities across Afghanistan. Correspondent Roxana Saberi is in Kabul where, she reports, the desperation is undeniable. Sa air max plus beri said no one expected the Taliban to reach Kabul so fast. In the past few days the Taliban have taken city after city. Afghans fleeing the fighters stormed Kabul s airport, where this morning there was more ch Ohxr Iraqi troops finds civilians left hungry by ISIS in Mosul
In 1990, then-President George Bush didn stanley cup t have to do much to persuade Persian Gulf nations to join an international coalition to kick Iraq out o stanley cup f Kuwait. Now, his son wants them to join a new coalition to fight terrorism. But old allies are hesitant.This time around, the aims seem much less clear-cut. Who is the enemy Is it a common enemy Is it terrorism Is it Osama bin Laden The United States needs to answer these questions and convince the world, especially the Arab and Muslim worlds, before striking at a Muslim nation, said Abdul Khaleq Abdulla, a political analyst in the United Arab Emirates.In 1990, the enemy was established and the issues were clear. That is not the case now, Abdulla said.The United States has identified Saudi exile bin Laden as the likely instigator of the Sept. 11 terror attacks on New York and Washington, and has warned Afghanistan where bin Laden has taken refuge that it faces retaliation if it doesn t hand him over. Most Arab and Muslim nations have condemned the attacks and said they would cooperate with Washington in the fight against terrorism.But few stanley cups have committed to lending military support, such as use of their air space or bases.The United States has yet to lay out detailed evidence in its case against bin Laden to would-be alliance partners, or at least not publicly. Neither has it said exactly what it would want of its coalition allies.There s resentment on the part of some in the Gulf that the United States instead