Taliban, Afghanistan and execution
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The shooting in DC by an Afghan suspect shouldn’t reflect on all Afghanistan, minister says
The foreign minister in Afghanistan's Taliban-run government says that the actions of an Afghan national charged in the shooting of two U.S.
More than $148 billion was spent by the U.S. government in its failed attempt to build a free Afghanistan, according to the final report by the official watchdog office, whose careful documentation of waste and fraud, and its warnings of Taliban resurgence, went largely unheeded.
A 17-year investigation into the U.S. reconstruction of Afghanistan found $29.2 billion in waste, fraud and abuse.
Afghanistan has expressed “deep regret" and strong condemnation of a cross-border attack into neighboring Tajikistan that killed three Chinese workers and wounded a fourth
Straight Arrow News on MSN
US spent $145 billion rebuilding Afghanistan. Nearly $30 billion was wasted, report says
The U.S. wasted nearly one of every five of the billions of dollars it spent trying to rebuild Afghanistan after it ousted the Taliban from power more than two decades ago, a new report says. The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) issued a final report Wednesday after monitoring U.
The audit is the first summary of the totality of 20 years of oversight work by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction.
Afghan suspect who allegedly shot National Guard members near the White House served in elite CIA counterterrorism unit before entering the U.S. in 2021.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is pausing all immigration applications such as requests for green cards for people from 19 countries banned from travel earlier this year, as part of sweeping immigration changes in the wake of the shooting of two National Guard troops.
A former senior British officer has told a public inquiry that British special forces in Afghanistan appeared to commit war crimes by executing suspects and despite widespread knowledge in the chain of command nothing was done.
KABUL: When Bahara was four months pregnant, she went to a Kabul hospital to beg for an abortion. "We're not allowed," a doctor told her. "If someone finds out, we will all end up in prison." Abortion in Afghanistan is illegal and you can be locked up for having or assisting one.