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U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan at least 30% complete, CENTCOM says
by Christen Mccurdy
Washington DC (UPI) Jun 1, 2021

The United States withdrawal from Afghanistan is between 30 and 44% complete, U.S. Central Command said in a press release Tuesday.

According to the release, as of 10 a.m. Monday, the United States has officially handed over six facilities to the Afghan Ministry of Defense, and anticipates additional transfers of bases and assets in the future.

The Department of Defense has moved about 300 C-17 planes' cargo loads of materiel out of Afghanistan and turned over nearly 13,000 pieces of equipment to the Defense Logistics Agency for disposition, according to CENTCOM.

CENTCOM, which is providing weekly reports on the progress of the U.S. exit from Afghanistan, also noted that it is only providing an approximate range of the percentage of completed work for operational security reasons.

"As the responsible and orderly exit continues, the size of the range will increase to preserve operational security," CENTCOM said.

"This update includes the progress on the retrograde of troops and equipment from Afghanistan, the turning over of equipment and facilities to the ANDSF, as well as the destruction of some equipment," officials said.

Last week, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told lawmakers that the retrograding of the U.S. presence in Afghanistan is proceeding slightly ahead of schedule -- with a CENTCOM report saying the withdrawal was nearly one-quarter complete.

In April, President Joe Biden ordered that U.S. troops be withdrawn from Afghanistan by Sept. 11.

That announcement extended a May 2021 deadline set under former President Donald Trump's administration, but defense officials told The New York Times last week that they are now treating mid-July as the deadline.


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THE STANS
Troop withdrawal from Afghanistan 'ahead of schedule,' Austin says
Washington DC (UPI) May 27, 2021
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told lawmakers Thursday that the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan is running slightly ahead of schedule. "I can report to you today that the retrograde is proceeding on pace, indeed slightly ahead of it," Austin told the House Appropriations subcommittee on defense before a hearing on the $715 billion Pentagon budget being released Friday. He did not offer further detail on the drawdown, but his announcement echoed a report a report from the Pentagon Tuesda ... read more

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