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All US and NATO Troops Leave Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan: US Defense Official

In April, President Joe Biden ordered the exit, to bring to a close US on-the-ground involvement in a war that began nearly 20 years ago following the September 11, 2001 attacks by an Afghanistan-based Al-Qaeda.

US Marine Sgt. Bryan Early, a squad leader with 1st Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment, leads his squad of Marines to the next compound while patrolling in Helmand province, Afghanistan. Photo: Cpl. Austin Long/US Marine Corps

All US and NATO troops have left Bagram Air Base, a US defense official told AFP Friday, signaling the complete withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan was imminent.

“All coalition forces are off Bagram,” the official — who asked not to be identified — said without specifying when the last US and NATO troops left the base, 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Kabul.

He did not say when the base will be officially handed over to Afghan forces.

The US military and NATO are in the final stages of winding up 20 years of military involvement in Afghanistan, bringing home the remaining troops by a deadline of September 11.

The Taliban have launched relentless offensives across Afghanistan in the past two months, gobbling up dozens of districts as Afghan security forces have largely consolidated their power in the vicinity of the country’s major urban areas.

The ability of Afghan forces to maintain control over the vital Bagram airfield will likely prove pivotal to maintaining security in the nearby capital Kabul and keeping pressure on the Taliban.

For decades, the base served as the linchpin for US strategic operations in the rugged country, where the long war against the Taliban and their Al-Qaeda allies was fought with air strikes and resupply missions stemming from the airfield.

Over the years, the mini-city has been visited by hundreds of thousands of US and NATO service members and contractors.

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