Americans are being evacuated from Afghanistan amid the Taliban's takeover of the country, but as many as 15,000 still remain there, according to administration sources who spoke to NBC News and the Washington Post. About 1,100 had been evacuated as of Tuesday night, but "now that we have established the flow, we expect those numbers to escalate," the White House said in a statement. By Wednesday, as many as 9,000 people could be evacuated per day, per a Pentagon briefing. The Taliban has promised safe passage for civilians heading to the Kabul airport, and national security adviser Jake Sullivan says the US plans "to hold them to that commitment." More:
- About that promise: Congressional sources tell the Hill "desperate" US citizens and Afghans have contacted them, saying they're not able to get to the airport even though the Taliban said safe passage would be allowed. Some say they've been threatened with violence by the Taliban. Others say they made it to the airport only to be turned away by overwhelmed guards.
- Another snag: Sources say there is not yet a plan to evacuate US citizens who are outside Kabul, because there is no way for them to get through Taliban checkpoints. It's not clear how many are outside the capital city.
- Opinion: An editorial at the Wall Street Journal notes that while it's good news the US military has control of the Kabul airport, with several thousand troops stationed there, the bad news is that the Biden administration may decide to "withdraw US troops too soon once again, leaving tens of thousands to the tender mercies of the Taliban." Biden has pledged to have all troops out of Afghanistan by Aug. 31, but "leaving Afghan translators and others behind would be a betrayal of the US commitment," the editorial board writes. About 50,000 Afghans who qualify for a Special Immigrant Visa because they helped the US are spread out in the country, not necessarily in Kabul.