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Daily Record
Daily Record
World
Chris Hughes & Naina Bhardwaj

UK sending Paras into Afghanistan to save over 2,000 embassy staff from Taliban's stronghold

The UK is sending 600 troops into Afghanistan to save over 2,000 embassy staff among others from the Taliban’s stronghold.

It follows concerns last night that they had advanced within 95 miles of Kabul after taking over 11 major Afghan cities yesterday.

Despite fierce resistance, this also included Ghanzi, a strategically important city surrounding the main road between Kabul and Kandahar.

According to the Mirror, heavy fighting was also reported in Kandahar, which was previously the Taliban’s heartland.

The 16th Air Assault Brigade including paratroopers, logisticians and medics will now be sent to back up the 170 personnel already there.

Defence secretary Ben Wallace said yesterday: “This morning I authorised moving to the next phase of the planned drawdown of forces and personnel.

The Paras are heading in to Afghanistan to save embassy staff. (Daily Mirror/Andy Stenning)

“That will involve the deploying of British Armed Forces into Afghanistan in order to enable the drawdown and relocation of British embassy personnel.

“The initial elements will deploy by the end of the week.”

The bloody Taliban advance means the UK embassy will close and a skeleton staff will relocate to form another more secure base within the city.

As many as 143 Afghan former interpreters were flown out of Kabul to the UK on Thursday and more than 1500 more are expected to be evacuated to the UK in the coming weeks.

Last night the rapid Taliban advance led to fears that beleaguered Kabul could fall quickly.

Meanwhile Pakistani forces clashed with fleeing refugees who massed near the closed off border.

With the last of the U.S.-led international forces set to leave by the end of the month the Taliban now control about two-thirds of the country.

U.S. intelligence fear the Taliban could isolate Kabul in 30 days and possibly take it over within 90.

Yesterday the head of Britain’s armed forces General Sir Nick Carter warned a “security vacuum” risks opening up in Afghanistan.

He told the BBC: “We have already a humanitarian tragedy. The question now is whether it gets worse.

“If we end up with a scenario where the state fractures, and you end up with a security vacuum, then there are ideal conditions for international terrorism and extremism to prosper. yet again.”

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