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US says Afghanistan withdrawal up to 12% ahead of deadline

4 years ago
An aerial view from a medevac helicopter shows the Helmand river Helmand province on November 8, 2011. Around 140,000 international troops are serving in Afghanistan, mostly from the United States, helping Afghan government forces fight a bloody, Taliban-led insurgency. AFP PHOTO/ BEHROUZ MEHRI (Photo credit should read BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP via Getty Images)

An aerial view from a medevac helicopter shows the Helmand river Helmand province on November 8, 2011 [BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP via Getty Images]

The process to fully withdraw US military forces from Afghanistan is 12% complete, Central Command (CENTCOM) said Tuesday, Anadolu Agency reported.

The military gave an approximate range of between 6% – 12% completion as of May 10, noting the equivalent of 104 C-17 cargo aircraft worth of equipment has been removed from the war-torn country, and 1,800 other pieces of equipment have been destroyed.

US President Joe Biden set a Sept. 11 deadline for all US forces to be withdrawn from Afghanistan, bringing a close to a 20-year war that has cost Washington roughly $2.2 trillion and resulted in about 2,400 military deaths, according to the Costs of War Project at Brown University.

CENTCOM said it expects to provide weekly updates on progress toward meeting the president’s goal.

READ: Iran, Afghanistan border closed amid COVID-19 fears

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