Re: [新闻] 美军不告而别,惹怒阿富汗政府军

楼主: Aidrux (保境安民)   2021-07-13 08:47:54
这篇很有趣
都在笑美军射后不理
某太平洋岛国也要当心美爹烙跑
不过局势这一两天突然明朗了
阿富汗没了美军保护
塔利班政权开始往中国边界进军
外交部长王毅昨天紧急升空去土库曼斯坦等中亚国家商讨对策
还喊话说阿富汗不存在需要填补的权力真空
笑死
你中国无法像美帝一样输出秩序就承认
塔利班叫你中国赶快投资帮忙重建你就乖乖签支票
话那么多干嘛啊笑死
中亚有塔利班
南边有印度
海岸有日美联军
北边则是趁你病要你割领土割阑趴的俄罗斯
你中国不是很强?
讲话啊!
烂东西不要脸
洼地就是洼地
等著被输入秩序吧
※ 引述《loveve5566 (PAVONEPOI)》之铭言:
: 1.媒体来源:
: 英国卫报 The Guardian
: 2.记者署名:
: Peter Beaumont
: 3.完整新闻标题:
: Afghan anger over US’s sudden, silent Bagram departure
: 4.完整新闻内文:
: 简略翻译摘要
: 上礼拜五7/2晚间,在巴格拉姆机场的空军基地
: 阿富汗政府军突然发现怎么断电断水了
: 原本以为是塔利班打过来,没想到是美军全数撤离
: 美军很替地球着想,关门前连水跟电都关了
: 在停电停水的时间,空军基地惨遭洗劫
: 美军因为怕塔利班在美军撤退的时候攻击美军
: 所以瞒着阿富汗政府军就偷跑了
: 阿富汗政府军整个气炸
: US forces shut off the Bagram airfield’s electricity supply and did not
: notify the base’s senior Afghan officer when they departed on Friday,
: prompting puzzlement and anger among Afghan soldiers there.
: The airfield’s new commander, Gen Mir Asadullah Kohistani, only discovered
: the Americans’ departure more than two hours after they left, he said on
: Monday. : The fresh details of the American forces’ stealthy nighttime withdrawal from
: the sprawling base near Kabul, where they had spent two decades, underlined
: the uneasiness with which US forces sometimes regarded their Afghan partners.
: “We [heard] some rumour that the Americans had left Bagram … and finally by
: 7am we understood that it was confirmed that they had already left”
: Kohistani told Associated Press.
: “We did not know of their timeline for departure. They did not tell us when
: they left,” added the commander during a tour of the evacuated and
: now-looted base for journalists.
: Kohistani’s account appeared to contradict a statement issued last week by
: the US that its forces had co-ordinated their departure from various bases
: with Afghan leaders. In response to Kohistani’s account, US spokesman Col
: Sonny Leggett referred back to the statement.
: With 3,000 troops under his command, Kohistani’s forces are far smaller than
: the US military presence at the base during its heyday when Bagram resembled
: a small, if heavily militarised, town with its coffee shops, sports
: facilities, fast food chains and even a cinema.
: Commenting on the capabilities of Afghan forces in Bagram, who are expecting
: to be attacked by a resurgent Taliban, he added: “You know, if we compare
: ourselves with the Americans, it’s a big difference. But according to our
: capabilities … we are trying to do the best and as much as possible secure
: and serve all the people.” : Within 20 minutes of the US’s silent departure on Friday, the electricity
: was shut down and the base was plunged into darkness, said Abdul Raouf, a
: soldier of 10 years who has also served in Taliban strongholds of Helmand and
: Kandahar provinces.
: The sudden darkness was like a signal to the looters, he said. They entered
: from the north, smashing through the first barrier, ransacking buildings,
: loading anything that was not nailed down into trucks.
: “In one night they lost all the goodwill of 20 years by leaving the way they
: did, in the night, without telling the Afghan soldiers who were outside
: patrolling the area,” another Afghan soldier told AP.
: The new details of last week’s secretive withdrawal under cover of darkness
: came as Afghan authorities deployed hundreds of commandos and pro-government
: militiamen on Tuesday to counter the Taliban’s blistering offensive in the
: north, a day after more than 1,000 government troops fled into neighbouring
: Tajikistan.
: Fighting has raged across several provinces, but the insurgents have focused
: primarily on carrying out a devastating campaign across the northern
: countryside, seizing dozens of districts in the past two months.
: “We are planning to launch a big offensive to retake the lost territories
: from the enemy,” Fawad Aman, a spokesman for the Ministry of Defence, told
: AFP. “Our forces are being organised on the ground for this operation.”
: Troops and pro-government militiamen were deployed in the northern provinces : of Takhar and Badakhshan where the Taliban have captured swathes of territory
: at lighting speed, often without any fighting.
: The US announced on Friday it had completely vacated its biggest airfield in
: the country in advance of a final withdrawal that the Pentagon says will be
: completed by the end of August.
: The statement said the handover of the many bases had been in process soon
: after President Joe Biden’s mid-April announcement that the US was
: withdrawing the last of its forces.
: Before the Afghan army could take control of the airfield about an hour’s
: drive from the Afghan capital, Kabul, it was invaded by a small army of
: looters, who ransacked barracks and storage tents before being evicted,
: according to Afghan military officials.
: Kohistani insisted the Afghan forces could hold on to the heavily fortified
: base despite a string of Taliban victories on the battlefield. The airfield
: also includes a prison with about 5,000 prisoners, many of them allegedly
: Taliban.
: The militants’ latest surge comes as the last US and Nato forces pull out of
: the country. As of last week, most Nato soldiers had already quietly left.
: The last US soldiers are likely to remain until an agreement to protect the
: Kabul airport, which is expected to be undertaken by Turkey, is completed.
: Meanwhile, in northern Afghanistan, district after district has fallen to the
: Taliban. In just the last two days, hundreds of Afghan soldiers fled across : the border into Tajikistan rather than fight the insurgents. “In battle it
: is sometimes one step forward and some steps back,” said Kohistani.
: The general said the Afghan military was changing its strategy to focus on
: the strategic districts. He insisted they would retake them in the coming
: days without saying how that would be accomplished.
: Kohistani said the US left behind 3.5m objects, all itemised by the departing
: military. They include tens of thousands of water bottles, energy drinks and
: military ready-made meals.
: They also include thousands of civilian vehicles, many of them without keys
: to start them, and hundreds of armoured vehicles. Kohistani said the US also
: left behind small weapons and the ammunition for them, but the departing
: troops took heavy weapons with them
: The Afghan soldiers who wandered through the base that had once housed as
: many as 100,000 US troops were deeply critical of how they had left Bagram,
: going in the night without telling the Afghan soldiers who were patrolling
: the perimeter.
: On Monday, three days after the US departure, Afghan soldiers were still
: collecting piles of rubbish that included empty water bottles, cans and empty
: energy drinks left behind by the looters.
: 5.完整新闻连结 (或短网址):
: https://bit.ly/3jOOGHp
: 6.备注: : ※ 一个人三天只能张贴一则新闻,被删或自删也算额度内,超贴者水桶,请注意
: ※ 备注请勿张贴三日内新闻(包含连结、标题等)

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