President Biden approached Russian President Vladimir Putin at their June summit about keeping U.S. counterterrorism forces in Central Asia after the Afghanistan pullout. Putin rebuffed the plan.
After Afghan withdrawal, U.S. hoped to base forces near Afghanistan, but Putin told Biden that Moscow objects
The Taliban seized control of Afghanistan more rapidly than intelligence officials expected. Here’s a look at the nine days that sealed the group’s yearslong takeover. Illustration: Laura KammermannRussian President Vladimir Putin, during a June 16 summit meeting with President Biden, objected to any role for American forces in Central Asian countries, senior U.S. and Russian officials said, undercutting U.S.
than to expand cooperation with a new American president over the turmoil in Afghanistan, former and current U.S. officials said. “The Russians have no interest in having the U.S. back in there,” said Paul Goble, a former State Department expert on Eurasia. The U.S. requirement for what the Pentagon calls an “over-the-horizon” counterterrorism capability in Afghanistan has grown substantially in recent days with the Taliban takeover.
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