US decides to send 3,000 troops to Afghanistan

Kabul: Taliban militants are wreaking havoc in Afghanistan, with the Taliban reportedly taking control of 60 per cent of the country's territory. The Taliban have taken control of Afghanistan's second-largest city after US troops withdrew from the country. The Taliban on Friday captured Kandahar, Afghanistan's second largest city, amid ongoing bloody fighting in the country. On Friday, the Taliban claimed to have captured another provincial capital, Kandahar. Now only the capital Kabul remains. Kandahar is the second largest city in Afghanistan after Kabul.

 
Meanwhile, the United States has decided to send troops to Afghanistan due to the rapidly changing situation in Afghanistan and the strengthening of the Taliban's grip. But not to confront the Taliban, the United States will send more than 3,000 troops to help its embassy staff, citizens and special visa applicants leave. The troops will be stationed at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul. It will help the U.S. military repatriate U.S. citizens from Afghanistan and provide them with air travel and security.
The Taliban's grip on Afghanistan is slowly strengthening. The next target of the Taliban will be Kabul. Danish, an Indian photographer, was assassinated by the Taliban in Kandahar a few days ago. On Thursday, the Taliban took control of two more provincial capitals, Ghazni and Herat, before taking control of Kandahar. The Taliban are just 130 km from Kabul. Thus far, the terrorist organization has captured 12 provincial capitals. Terrorists fly white flags in Ghazni. Two local officials said there was still sporadic fighting at military and intelligence bases outside the city.
The White House, meanwhile, said Wednesday that it was up to the Afghan leadership to decide whether it had the political will to fight. The Biden administration says the Afghan National Forces, whom we have trained for the past two decades, have the capability and equipment to fight.