US believes 1,500 citizens remain in Afghanistan

Blinken's count comes after days of pressing for official estimates of how many Americans remain to be safely gotten out of the country, ahead of a planned U.S.troop withdrawal Tuesday.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (Photo | AP)
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (Photo | AP)

WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken says the administration believes about 1,500 American citizens remain in Afghanistan, 12 days into a massive U.S.military airlift.

Blinken said at a news conference Wednesday that another 4,500 Americans have been evacuated in a U.S.-run, round-the-clock operation since the Taliban reached the capital Aug.14, completing a sudden rout of the U.S.-backed Afghan government and military.

Blinken's count comes after days of pressing for official estimates of how many Americans remain to be safely gotten out of the country, ahead of a planned U.S.troop withdrawal Tuesday.

American officials are in contact with about 500 American citizens to try to get them safely out of the country, the U.S.official said.

Blinken described ongoing efforts to reach the final 1,000 Americans, ahead of the U.S.withdrawal.

“We're aggressively reaching out to them multiple times a day, through multiple channels of communication — phone, email, text-messaging — to determine whether they still want to leave,'' he said.

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