-
ISIS-K had claimed responsibility for the attack at the Kabul airport. President Biden vowed, "We will not forgive. We will not forget. We will hunt you down and make you pay."
-
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., criticized Reps. Seth Moulton, D-Mass., and Peter Meijer, R-Mich., for traveling to Kabul, characterizing the choice to enter the region as "deadly serious."
-
World Health Organization medical staff are expressing concern about a new spread of the disease following the Taliban take-over.
-
The president told G-7 leaders that the U.S. is set to finish withdrawing from Afghanistan by Aug. 31 and asked the Pentagon and State Department for contingency plans if the deadline cannot be met.
-
Aid groups say there's an urgent need for housing for tens of thousands refugees from Afghanistan as they begin to resettle around the world.
-
The U.S. military spent years training Afghan soldiers to fight insurgents. Yet in a matter of days, the Afghan National Army collapsed, and the Taliban captured the country. What went wrong?
-
Is the cost of leaving Afghanistan greater than the cost of staying? And was pulling out the right decision? "Intelligence Squared" examines these competing perspectives in this special timely edition of "Agree-to-Disagree: Leaving Afghanistan." Listen Sunday, August 22 at 7 p.m. on WRVO, on-air and online.
-
NPR's A Martínez talks to Afghan American novelist Khaled Hosseini about his reflections on Afghanistan, which has been shattered by decades of war, tribal feuds and corruption.
-
During a press conference in Syracuse regarding recent infrastructure funding, Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer updated central New Yorkers on what he knows regarding recent events in Afghanistan.
-
The last four U.S. presidents have found themselves mired in Afghanistan. The last two saw the war as an unwanted inheritance and an albatross, and they were determined to end the American role.