Fewer than 1,400 evacuees from Afghanistan still at Qatar base, US general says

US Air Force Service members prepare to board evacuees onto a C-17 Globemaster lll on Aug. 22, 2021, at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar. (File/AFP)
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Updated 04 September 2021
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Fewer than 1,400 evacuees from Afghanistan still at Qatar base, US general says

  • The US evacuated roughly 124,000 people from Kabul last month
  • Afghans must overcome bureaucratic immigration hurdles to eventually enter the US

DOHA: The United States has moved most of the 57,000 people it evacuated from Afghanistan to Qatar out of the Gulf state, with fewer than 1,400 still at the US military base there, a US general said on Saturday.

The US evacuated roughly 124,000 people from Kabul last month as part of a huge US-led airlift of its citizens, Afghans and other nationals as the Taliban took control of the country.

Brig. Gen. Gerald Donohue told reporters some of those who had been flown out of Qatar were now in the United States, while others were in Europe, where they are being processed.

Many of the 1,400 still at Al Udeid base in Qatar are scheduled to be flown out on Saturday, while a small group needing medical care would stay until able to travel, he said.

Afghan and non-Afghan nationals had been flown to Al Udeid and at the peak there were over 17,500 evacuees on the base at a single point in time, the general said.

Nine babies were born at the base during the evacuation mission, he added.

Following the scramble to evacuate vulnerable Afghans, thousands of people, some with no documentation or pending US visa applications, others in families with mixed immigration statuses, are now waiting in “transit hubs” in third countries.

Afghans must overcome bureaucratic immigration hurdles to eventually enter the United States.


Trump, Putin talk of war and peace as US weighs easing Russian oil sanctions

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Trump, Putin talk of war and peace as US weighs easing Russian oil sanctions

MOSCOW: US President Donald Trump and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin discussed on Monday the war in Iran and prospects for peace in Ukraine, just hours after the Kremlin chief warned that a global energy crisis threatened the world economy.
The US and Israeli attack on Iran triggered the biggest spike in oil prices since the turmoil following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, as Gulf producers reduce output after the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
The Kremlin said Trump called Putin, in the leaders’ first telephone call ‌this year, and ‌they discussed Russian ideas for a speedy end to ​the ‌conflict ⁠in Iran, ​the ⁠military situation in Ukraine and the impact of Venezuela on the global oil market.
“I had a very good call with President Putin,” Trump told a press conference at his Florida golf club, adding that Putin wanted to be helpful on Iran.
“I said, ‘You could be more helpful by getting the Ukraine-Russia war over with. That will be more helpful.’“
The call came within hours of Putin’s remarks that the US-Israeli war on Iran had triggered a ⁠global energy crisis, while cautioning that oil production dependent on transport through the ‌Strait of Hormuz could soon come to ‌a halt.
Putin said Russia, the world’s second-largest oil exporter and ​holder of its biggest natural gas ‌reserves, was ready to work again with European customers if they wanted to ‌return to long-term cooperation.

US SANCTIONS
Amid the turmoil on global energy markets, Trump’s administration is considering reducing oil sanctions on Russia, with an announcement possible as soon as Monday, according to three sources familiar with the planning.
The move would be intended to boost world supplies of oil following massive disruptions ‌to Middle East shipments from the expanding conflict, but could also complicate US efforts to deprive Russia of revenue for its war ⁠in Ukraine.
Talks could ⁠cover broad sanctions relief as well as more targeted options for certain countries, such as India, to buy Russian oil without fear of US penalties, including tariffs, the sources told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Last week, the United States allowed India to temporarily buy Russian crude oil already on tankers at sea, to help it cope with the cuts to Middle East supply.
Kremlin foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov said the discussion with Trump was “very substantial” and “likely to have practical significance for further work between the two countries.”
Ushakov said Trump believed it was in the US interest to see a “rapid end to the conflict in Ukraine with a ceasefire and a long-term settlement.”
The ​advance of Russian troops in Ukraine ​should prompt Kyiv to seek a negotiated end to the conflict, he added.