Rechercher dans ce blog

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

With Afghanistan withdrawal complete, America's longest war ends - WXIX

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — A defensive President Joe Biden on Tuesday called the U.S. airlift to extract more than 120,000 Americans, Afghans and other allies from Afghanistan to end a 20-year war an “extraordinary success,” though more than 100 Americans and thousands of others were left behind.

Twenty-four hours after the last American C-17 cargo plane roared off from Kabul, Biden spoke to the nation and vigorously defended his decision to end America’s longest war and withdraw all U.S. troops ahead of an Aug. 31 deadline.

“I was not going to extend this forever war,” Biden declared from the White House. “And I was not going to extend a forever exit.”

Biden has faced tough questions about the way the U.S. went about leaving Afghanistan — a chaotic evacuation with spasms of violence, including a suicide bombing last week that killed 13 American service members and 169 Afghans.

He is under heavy criticism, particularly from Republicans, for his handling of the evacuation. But he said it was inevitable that the final departure from two decades of war, first negotiated with the Taliban for May 1 by former President Donald Trump, would have been difficult, with likely violence, no matter when it was planned and conducted.

“To those asking for a third decade of war in Afghanistan, I ask, ‘What is the vital national interest?’” Biden said. He added, “I simply do not believe that the safety and security of America is enhanced by continuing to deploy thousands of American troops and spending billions of dollars in Afghanistan.”

Asked after the speech about Biden sounding angry at some criticism, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the president had simply offered his “forceful assessment.”

Biden scoffed at Republicans — and some Democrats — who contend the U.S. would have been better served maintaining a small military footprint in Afghanistan. Before Thursday’s attack, the U.S. military had not suffered a combat casualty since February 2020 — around the time the Trump administration brokered its deal with the Taliban to end the war by May of this year.

Biden said breaking the Trump deal would have restarted a shooting war. He said those who favor remaining at war also fail to recognize the weight of deployment, with a scourge of PTSD, financial struggles, divorce and other problems for U.S. troops.

“When I hear that we could’ve, should’ve continued the so-called low-grade effort in Afghanistan at low risk to our service members, at low cost, I don’t think enough people understand how much we’ve asked of the 1% of this country to put that uniform on,” Biden said.

In addition to all the questions at home, Biden is also adjusting to a new relationship with the Taliban, the Islamist militant group the U.S. toppled after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in America, and that is now once again in power in Afghanistan.

Biden has tasked Secretary of State Antony Blinken to coordinate with international partners to hold the Taliban to their promise of safe passage for Americans and others who want to leave in the days ahead.

“We don’t take them by their word alone, but by their actions,” Biden said. “We have leverage to make sure those commitments are met.”

Biden also pushed back against criticism that he fell short of his pledge to get all Americans out of the country ahead of the U.S. military withdrawal. He said many of the Americans left behind are dual citizens, some with deep family roots that are complicating their ability to leave Afghanistan.

“The bottom line: 90% of Americans in Afghanistan who wanted to leave were able to leave,” Biden said. “For those remaining Americans, there is no deadline. We remain committed to get them out, if they want to come out.”

Biden repeated his argument that ending the Afghanistan war was a crucial step for recalibrating American foreign policy toward growing challenges posed by China and Russia — and counterterrorism concerns that pose a more potent threat to the U.S.

“There’s nothing China or Russia would rather have, want more in this competition, than the United States to be bogged down another decade in Afghanistan,” he said

In Biden’s view the war could have ended 10 years ago with the U.S. killing of Osama bin Laden, whose al-Qaida extremist network planned and executed the 9/11 plot from an Afghanistan sanctuary. Al-Qaida has been vastly diminished, preventing it thus far from again attacking the United States. The president lamented an estimated $2 trillion of taxpayer money that was spent fighting the war.

“What have we lost as a consequence in terms of opportunities?” Biden asked.

Congressional committees, whose interest in the war waned over the years, are expected to hold public hearings on what went wrong in the final months of the U.S. withdrawal.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., on Tuesday described the Biden administration’s handling of the evacuation as “probably the biggest failure in American government on a military stage in my lifetime” and promised that Republicans would press the White House for answers.

Meanwhile, the Senate met briefly Tuesday, with Vice President Kamala Harris presiding over the chamber, to pass by unanimous consent a bill that increases spending for temporary assistance to U.S. citizens and their dependents returning from another country because of illness, war or other crisis. Biden quickly signed the legislation, which raises funding for the program from $1 million to $10 million.

A group of Republican lawmakers gathered on the House floor Tuesday morning and participated in a moment of silence for the 13 service members who were killed in the suicide bomber attack.

They also sought a House vote on legislation from Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., which among other things would require the administration to submit a report on how many Americans remain in Afghanistan as well as the number of Afghans who had applied for a category of visas reserved for those employed by or on behalf of the U.S. government.

The GOP lawmakers objected as Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-Mich., gaveled the House into adjournment. They then gathered for a press conference to denounce the administration.

For many U.S. commanders and troops who served in Afghanistan, it was a day of mixed emotions.

“All of us are conflicted with feelings of pain and anger, sorrow and sadness, combined with pride and resilience,” said Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He commanded troops in Afghanistan earlier in his career. “But one thing I am certain of, for any soldier, sailor, airman or Marine and their families, your service mattered. It was not in vain.”

—-

Associated Press writers Robert Burns and Lolita C. Baldor contributed reporting.

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 07:37PM
https://ift.tt/3gPEMmO

With Afghanistan withdrawal complete, America's longest war ends - WXIX
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

New CDT Bill Would Complete Trail by 2028 | Backpacker - Backpacker

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

While thousands of hikers set out to hike some part of the Continental Divide Trail every year, large sections of the path are still incomplete. That could soon change: A bill introduced by Representative Joe Neguse (D-CO) would direct the US Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management to complete the 3,100-mile trail by its 50th Birthday in 2028. 

The CDT is historically known as America’s most rugged long-trail. Stretching from Mexico to Canada through New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana, the trail takes backpackers through some of the most varied terrain in the country. Ranging in elevation from 4,000 to more than 14,000 feet, the CDT is easily the highest long-distance trail; it also features the highest point on any National Scenic Trail when it travels over the 14,278-foot Gray’s Peak in Colorado. 

With large unfinished sections, however, CDT hikers are forced to road-walk or bushwhack to reach other completed sections. Many hikers describe the CDT as the most difficult trail out of the Triple Crown, in part due to its unfinished nature. 

According to the American Hiking Society, the CDT’s route changes so often that it has been difficult to label certain sections of it at all. Closing gaps along the trail would help to provide more accessibility to recreational users, and could even take some of the pressure off of other long trails like the Appalachian Trail and Pacific Crest Trail, which see millions of people every year.  

While people have been hiking portions of the CDT for hundreds or thousands of years, its modern history as a long trail began in 1978, when a study conducted by the Department of the Interior identified it as a candidate for protection, and the National Parks Land Act subsequently named it a National Scenic Trail.

Since then, a lack of funding and enthusiasm have contributed to delays in the completion of the trail. It wasn’t until 1999 that the Continental Divide Trail Association began to spearhead efforts to complete and maintain the CDT, but later shut down due to lack of funding. In 2012, the Continental Divide Trail Coalition was established to pick up where the CDTA left off. 

The bill comes at a watershed moment for hiking in the United States. Americans spend $646 billion dollars on outdoor recreation each year, and the industry also provides 6.1 billion jobs. A 7-year project like the completion of the Continental Divide Trail could enhance both recreational opportunities and employment. 

The bill also counts the support of Representative Teresa Leger Fernandez, (D-NM). In a press release announcing the bill, Leger Fernandez hailed the legislation’s potential impact on the region in both dollars and natural beauty preserved. 

“People have traveled trails through our mountains for centuries—connecting communities, trade and people. Hiking the trails today connects us to the quiet beauty and strength of our forests, as well as the stories of the peoples who traveled here before,” she said.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
September 01, 2021 at 05:49AM
https://ift.tt/2V1HCxe

New CDT Bill Would Complete Trail by 2028 | Backpacker - Backpacker
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Histories of Place, Architecture, and Underrepresented Communities: For a Complete City - Brooklyn Rail

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

Enlace Arquitectura, the architectural firm I established in Venezuela in 2007, was invited to be part of the 17th International Architecture Exhibition at the Biennale di Venezia, curated by the Lebanese architect and dean of the MIT Faculty of Architecture, Hashim Sarkis, which examines the question “How will we live together?” The installation is part of the segment dedicated to “emerging communities” at Le Corderie of the Arsenale.

Instead of proposing “improvements” for the barrio La Palomera, a small neighborhood of 16 hectares in Caracas and just under 6,000 inhabitants, the installation focuses on showing the spatial and cultural richness that already exists. It acknowledges a piece of the city that is the home of more than half of Caracas’s residents.

Barrios have been naturalized as “informal” and “marginal.” Deep-seated feelings of discrimination, condescension, and fear cloud the perception of many, the approaches of well-intentioned professionals, and determine the way public funds are invested.

Interested in addressing this problematic perception and taking advantage of a close relationship with the community of the barrio La Palomera, Enlace Arquitectura, Ciudad Laboratorio, and neighbors began the cultural program “Integration Process Caracas (IPC)” in 2018. The Foundation Bigott, the City of Baruta, La Hacienda La Trinidad, artists, journalists, educators, and designers also participated. In this project, making the Histories of Place visible, and celebrating the existing experiences and ways of living, has become an integral element of architectural design. Emphasis is placed on participation and the temporal dimension of practice as strategies for encouraging awareness.

Over the course of a year and a half, multiple excursions were organized for people to get to know La Palomera. Activities included the public reading of the Manifesto to the Complete City on February 9, 2019 written by the Venezuelan writer and activist Cheo Carvajal which calls for an integrated city that overcomes prejudices and exclusions. Artists were invited to work with the community on shared projects. A wide audience participated in walks, bocce games, celebrations, dances, music, mapping exercises of the barrio, and listened to the stories of its founders. Another fundamental activity was the mapping of the vegetation that grows in La Palomera and a tour of its gardens. Twenty-four gardens were identified and recorded with portraits of their owners and their stories.

A synthesis of the IPC experience was exhibited for the first time at La Hacienda La Trinidad Parque Cultural in February 2020. The exhibition on view in Venice builds on this work, and includes the Ethnobotanical Dictionary of the plants from the gardens of La Palomera, which identifies 260 species in the barrio with information on their use, whether medicinal, culinary or ornamental, and a description of how they are reproduced and cultivated. It is complemented by drawings of 18 gardens and 3 public spaces where all the plants, objects, and paraphernalia that make up these places are detailed. The 1.75 hectares of public space in the barrio which consist of walkways, stairs, and squares, in addition to the gardens, are also celebrated in the format of a wooden model that measures 8 meters by 4.5 meters and hangs suspended from the high ceilings of Le Corderie. The model also includes both cultivated and spontaneous vegetation in acrylic reproductions. Images of these plants are reproduced on long scrolls suspended from the ceiling. The species, gardens, public spaces, as well as events and celebrations in La Palomera are documented in www.lapalomera.org as part of the exhibition.

Just as knowledge of vegetation is worth celebrating, there are also many other remarkable attributes to recognize and appreciate in the barrio. Integrating a fragmented Caracas is both a symbolic and spatial process. Recognizing the inherent value in gardens and public spaces represents a fundamental premise in the process of advancing urban integration and in strengthening the notion of a complete city.

Furthermore, these activities have generated concrete opportunities to rehearse a Complete City in terms of integrating territories and leveling differences. For example, since October 2019, a new waste collection strategy is in place in La Palomera. Barrios typically have a large open-air container at their entrance where all residents deposit their garbage, since conventional garbage trucks cannot navigate the barrio’s narrow alleys. Instead, a door-to-door waste collection strategy through seven pedestrian routes has been implemented by the company Fospuca and the city of Baruta which in turn allowed the container to be removed and its place is now occupied by a planter cared for by residents of the sector. A second example is a project to transform an abandoned space into a center for art and culture. It aims to be not only a place for artistic expressions, but also a platform for thoughts and discussions that can feed urban transformations focused on integrating the city.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
September 01, 2021 at 07:29AM
https://ift.tt/3ysn5zC

Histories of Place, Architecture, and Underrepresented Communities: For a Complete City - Brooklyn Rail
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Active-duty Sailor and his former Navy colleague are charged with conspiring to traffic guns from Georgia to New Jersey - Department of Justice

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

ATLANTA - Elijah Isaiah Boykin, an active-duty U.S. Navy Sailor, and Elijah Keashon Barnes have been indicted for unlawfully obtaining and transporting dozens of firearms that were later used in New Jersey-area crimes.  Boykin and Barnes served together in the U.S. Navy until June 2020, when Barnes was discharged following his confinement for repeated violations of military law.

“Federal law prohibits the making of false statements and misrepresentations to licensed firearms dealers,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Kurt R. Erskine. “Individuals who use deception to buy guns intended for other people will face severe consequences, including imprisonment and the loss of valuable civil rights.”

“The unlawful acquisition and trafficking of firearms is a serious crime that threatens our communities here and abroad,” said ATF Special Agent in Charge, Atlanta Field Division Ben Gibbons. “This investigation illustrates the dedication of ATF and its law enforcement partners to disrupt illegal firearm straw purchase schemes within the U.S. or anywhere criminals choose to operate.”

According to Acting U.S. Attorney Erskine, the charges, and other information presented in court: Between April 2020 and August 2020, Elijah Isaiah Boykin purchased more than two dozen firearms from federally licensed firearms dealers in Georgia and Virginia.  The total purchase price exceeded $17,000 and was spread over eight transactions.  On each occasion, Boykin signed paperwork stating that he was the actual purchaser of the guns but paid using a credit card belonging to co-defendant Elijah Keashon Barnes.

Local law enforcement in and around Newark, New Jersey began to recover Boykin’s firearms shortly after they were purchased.  One pistol was recovered in October 2020, when police officers in Newark conducted a traffic stop and arrested Barnes, who was wanted on a Virginia warrant for domestic assault and battery.  The pistol was found in Barnes’s car.  A few months later, Newark police officers recovered another gun that Boykin purchased.  Forensic testing linked that second firearm to three separate shootings in Newark, including a violent mugging during which a victim was shot multiple times in the right leg.

To date, at least six firearms purchased by Boykin have been recovered in the city of Newark or a nearby township.

Elijah Isaiah Boykin, 25, of Palmetto, Georgia, and Elijah Keashon Barnes, 21, of Newark, New Jersey, were indicted by a federal grand jury on June 15, 2021 for conspiracy to make false statements, three counts of making false statements to federally licensed firearms dealers, and one count of unlawful transfer of firearm. On August 25, 2021, Boykin was arrested by Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) Agents at Naval Air Station Key West.  Barnes was arrested the same day in Newark.  The defendants will be arraigned at a later date in the Northern District of Georgia.

Members of the public are reminded that the indictment only contains charges.  The defendants are presumed innocent of the charges and it will be the government’s burden to prove the defendants’ guilt beyond a reasonable doubt at trial.

This case is being investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Theodore S. Hertzberg, Firearms Trafficking Coordinator for the Northern District of Georgia, is prosecuting the case.

For further information please contact the U.S. Attorney’s Public Affairs Office at USAGAN.PressEmails@usdoj.gov or (404) 581-6016.  The Internet address for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia is http://www.justice.gov/usao-ndga.

Adblock test (Why?)



"colleague" - Google News
September 01, 2021 at 12:00AM
https://ift.tt/3jwMgNp

Active-duty Sailor and his former Navy colleague are charged with conspiring to traffic guns from Georgia to New Jersey - Department of Justice
"colleague" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Uvr5Ps
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Contractor fined for failure to pull permits, complete work - KWCH

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

WICHITA, Kan. (KWCH) - A Sedgwick County construction contractor faces a near-$37,000 fie for not being properly licensed, failing to pull permits and failing to complete work on a pool removal and installation job.

The Sedgwick County District Attorney’s Office said a $36,997 default judgment was entered against David Michael Pirl, doing business as Pirl Construction. Sedgwick County DA Marc Bennett said Pirl “also failed to provide the consumer a three-day right to cancel transaction and failed to provide a requested refund once he quit the job, leaving a hole in the consumer’s backyard.”

“The Court found those failures to be deceptive and/or unconscionable under the Kansas Consumer Protection Act (KCPA),” the Sedgwick County DA said. “As part of the ruling the Court ordered Pirl to pay $5,800.00 in restitution to the consumer, $30,000.00 in civil penalties, and also pay court costs and investigation fees. The court also ordered Pirl to refrain from operating or conducting business in Kansas until he obtains all necessary licenses.”

The District Attorney issued a reminder to residents that contractors for many residential projects are required to be qualified and licensed by the Metropolitan Area Building and Construction Department (MABCD).

“Work may also require permits, inspections and certificates of occupancy to insure the work is safe and up to code,” the DA said.

Copyright 2021 KWCH. All rights reserved.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
September 01, 2021 at 03:33AM
https://ift.tt/3gLEmOo

Contractor fined for failure to pull permits, complete work - KWCH
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

With Afghanistan withdrawal complete, America's longest war ends - WKYT

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — Faced with tough questions about leaving Afghanistan, including Americans left behind, President Joe Biden planned to address the nation Tuesday about the way forward after 20 years of U.S. war.

Biden is under heavy criticism, particularly from Republicans, for his handling of the final evacuation, which successfully airlifted more than 120,000 people from Kabul airport but left more than 100 Americans behind.

The White House signaled Biden would look to begin turning the corner on Afghanistan with his address.

“He will make clear that as president, he will approach our foreign policy through the prism of what is in our national interests, including how best to continue to keep the American people safe,” press secretary Jen Psaki said in statement.

Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne, was the last soldier to leave...
Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne, was the last soldier to leave Afghanistan as the U.S. withdrew.(Source: DOD/CNN)

The last Air Force transport plane departed Kabul one minute before midnight Monday, raising questions about why Biden didn’t continue the airlift for at least another day. He had set Tuesday as a deadline for ending the evacuation and pulling out remaining troops after the Taliban took over the country.

In a written statement Monday, Biden said military commanders unanimously favored ending the airlift instead of extending it. He said he asked Secretary of State Antony Blinken to coordinate with international partners to hold the Taliban to their promise of safe passage for Americans and others who want to leave in the days ahead.

Thousands of troops spent a harrowing two weeks protecting the airlift of Afghans, Americans and others seeking to escape a country once again ruled by Taliban militants.

Gen. Frank McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command, said he believed remaining Americans who want to leave will still be able to. He called the situation heartbreaking but said that even if U.S. forces had stayed another 10 days, “we wouldn’t have gotten everybody out that we wanted to get out, and there still would have been people who would have been disappointed with that. It’s a tough situation.”

Blinken put the number of Americans still in Afghanistan at under 200, “likely closer to 100,” and said the State Department would keep working to get them out. He said the U.S. diplomatic presence would shift to Doha, Qatar.

Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security adviser, said Tuesday of the effort to get remaining Americans out: “It’s just that it has shifted from a military mission to a diplomatic mission.” On ABC’s “Good Morning America,” he cited “considerable leverage” over the Taliban to complete that effort.

The closing hours of the evacuation were marked by extraordinary drama. American troops faced the daunting task of getting final evacuees onto planes while also getting themselves and some of their equipment out, even as they monitored repeated threats — and at least two actual attacks — by the Islamic State group’s Afghanistan affiliate. A suicide bombing on Aug. 26 killed 13 American service members and some 169 Afghans. More died in various incidents during the airport evacuation.

The final pullout fulfilled Biden’s pledge to end what he called a “forever war” that began in response to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and rural Pennsylvania. His decision, announced in April, reflected a national weariness of the Afghanistan conflict.

In Biden’s view the war could have ended 10 years ago with the U.S. killing of Osama bin Laden, whose al-Qaida extremist network planned and executed the 9/11 plot from an Afghanistan sanctuary. Al-Qaida has been vastly diminished, preventing it thus far from again attacking the United States.

Congressional committees, whose interest in the war waned over the years, are expected to hold public hearings on what went wrong in the final months of the U.S. withdrawal. Why, for example, did the administration not begin earlier the evacuation of American citizens as well as Afghans who had helped the U.S. war effort?

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., on Tuesday described the Biden administration’s handling of the evacuation as “probably the biggest failure in American government on a military stage in my lifetime” and promised that Republicans would press the White House for answers on what went wrong.

“We can never make this mistake again,” McCarthy said.

It was not supposed to end this way. The administration’s plan, after declaring its intention to withdraw all combat troops, was to keep the U.S. Embassy in Kabul open, protected by a force of about 650 U.S. troops, including a contingent that would secure the airport along with partner countries. Washington planned to give the now-defunct Afghan government billions more to prop up its army.

Biden now faces doubts about his plan to prevent al-Qaida from regenerating in Afghanistan and of suppressing threats posed by other extremist groups such as the Islamic State group’s Afghanistan affiliate. The Taliban are enemies of the Islamic State group but retain links to al-Qaida.

The speed with which the Taliban captured Kabul on Aug. 15 caught the Biden administration by surprise. It forced the U.S. to empty its embassy and frantically accelerate an evacuation effort that featured an extraordinary airlift executed mainly by the U.S. Air Force, with American ground forces protecting the airfield. The airlift began in such chaos that a number of Afghans died on the airfield, including at least one who attempted to cling to a C-17 transport plane as it sped down the runway.

—-

Associated Press writer Aamer Madhani contributed reporting.

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 07:37PM
https://ift.tt/38uvNmw

With Afghanistan withdrawal complete, America's longest war ends - WKYT
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Unleashing the Power of Integration - Complete Controller Abandons Legacy Systems to Streamline Towards Fully Unified Cloud-Based Systems - PRNewswire

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

AUSTIN, Texas, Aug. 31, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Complete Controller announces its upcoming deadline for sunsetting the hosting of legacy desktop software at the close of September 2021. By this date, all of the company's client files will be successfully converted to QuickBooks Online, offering an improved bookkeeping platform experience for its customers and CPA users by replacing its hosted desktop applications with web-based ones that are easier to integrate and host.

The 14-year-old hosting and bookkeeping service launched its push toward only featuring web-based applications in late 2019. By 2020, the company decided only to accept new clients willing to convert to or already using QuickBooks Online (QBO) products. It has since migrated the bulk of its existing client base to QBO by offering a special pricing enticement for early adopters. In 2021 the final push to convert late adopters, coupled with the integration of Box as their governed eFiling Cabinet solution, has culminated in the company achieving a genuinely cloud-based solution. 

"We are moving away from the multi-user server environment and legacy software hosting," shares Steve Huck, Complete Controller's Technology Administrator. "The future state of Complete Controller will be to provide a web-based platform for customers and their tax professionals to access our core products of QuickBooks Online, eFiling Cabinet, SmartAP, and all connected apps in a single sign-on environment." 

Complete Controller plans to use their migration to QuickBooks Online as an opportunity to create a seamlessly integrated bookkeeping model that offers more ease and efficiency for their small business clients. Providing greater transparency and control for CPA firms along with producing significant savings to their bottom line.

For a deeper dive on Complete Controller's conversion process, view Intuit's comprehensive case study highlighting the transition.

About Complete Controller
Complete Controller is a national cloud-based client accounting services firm that delivers bookkeeping services, audit-ready records, unlimited document storage, and performance reporting to small businesses, households, trusts, and their CPAs. Founder and CEO Jennifer Brazer is a pioneer in the virtualization of professional services and a published author. She is a vocal proponent of financial literacy, entrepreneurial empowerment, and cloud business strategies.

Press Contact: 
Jordan Johnson
[email protected]
866-443-8879 ext. 727

SOURCE Complete Controller

Related Links

completecontroller.com

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 09:36PM
https://ift.tt/3Bt0kxw

Unleashing the Power of Integration - Complete Controller Abandons Legacy Systems to Streamline Towards Fully Unified Cloud-Based Systems - PRNewswire
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

With Afghanistan withdrawal complete, America's longest war ends - WDAM

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States has completed its withdrawal from Afghanistan, ending America’s longest war and closing a chapter in military history likely to be remembered for colossal failures, unfulfilled promises and a frantic final exit that cost the lives of more than 180 Afghans and 13 U.S. service members, some barely older than the war.

Hours before President Joe Biden’s Tuesday deadline for shutting down a final airlift, and thus ending the U.S. war, Air Force transport planes carried a remaining contingent of troops from Kabul airport late Monday. Thousands of troops had spent a harrowing two weeks protecting the airlift of tens of thousands of Afghans, Americans and others seeking to escape a country once again ruled by Taliban militants.

In announcing the completion of the evacuation and war effort. Gen. Frank McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command, said the last planes took off from Kabul airport at 3:29 p.m. Washington time, or one minute before midnight in Kabul. He said some American citizens, likely numbering in “the very low hundreds,” were left behind, and that he believes they will still be able to leave the country.

Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne, was the last soldier to leave...
Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne, was the last soldier to leave Afghanistan as the U.S. withdrew.(Source: DOD/CNN)

Secretary of State Antony Blinken put the number of Americans left behind at under 200, “likely closer to 100,” and said the State Department would keep working to get them out. He praised the military-led evacuation as heroic and said the U.S. diplomatic presence would shift to Doha, Qatar.

Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security adviser, said Tuesday that the mission to get Americans out of Afghanistan continues.

“It’s just that it has shifted from a military mission to a diplomatic mission,” Sullivan said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” He cited “considerable leverage” over the Taliban to get Americans out.

Biden was set to address the nation on Afghanistan later Tuesday.

Biden said in a written statement Monday that military commanders unanimously favored ending the airlift, not extending it. He said he asked Blinken to coordinate with international partners in holding the Taliban to their promise of safe passage for Americans and others who want to leave in the days ahead.

The airport had become a U.S.-controlled island, a last stand in a 20-year war that claimed more than 2,400 American lives.

The closing hours of the evacuation were marked by extraordinary drama. American troops faced the daunting task of getting final evacuees onto planes while also getting themselves and some of their equipment out, even as they monitored repeated threats — and at least two actual attacks — by the Islamic State group’s Afghanistan affiliate. A suicide bombing on Aug. 26 killed 13 American service members and some 169 Afghans. More died in various incidents during the airport evacuation.

The final pullout fulfilled Biden’s pledge to end what he called a “forever war” that began in response to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and rural Pennsylvania. His decision, announced in April, reflected a national weariness of the Afghanistan conflict. Now he faces criticism at home and abroad, not so much for ending the war as for his handling of a final evacuation that unfolded in chaos and raised doubts about U.S. credibility.

The U.S. war effort at times seemed to grind on with no endgame in mind, little hope for victory and minimal care by Congress for the way tens of billions of dollars were spent for two decades. The human cost piled up — tens of thousands of Americans injured in addition to the dead.

More than 1,100 troops from coalition countries and more than 100,000 Afghan forces and civilians died, according to Brown University’s Costs of War project.

In Biden’s view the war could have ended 10 years ago with the U.S. killing of Osama bin Laden, whose al-Qaida extremist network planned and executed the 9/11 plot from an Afghanistan sanctuary. Al-Qaida has been vastly diminished, preventing it thus far from again attacking the United States.

Congressional committees, whose interest in the war waned over the years, are expected to hold public hearings on what went wrong in the final months of the U.S. withdrawal. Why, for example, did the administration not begin earlier the evacuation of American citizens as well as Afghans who had helped the U.S. war effort?

It was not supposed to end this way. The administration’s plan, after declaring its intention to withdraw all combat troops, was to keep the U.S. Embassy in Kabul open, protected by a force of about 650 U.S. troops, including a contingent that would secure the airport along with partner countries. Washington planned to give the now-defunct Afghan government billions more to prop up its army.

Biden now faces doubts about his plan to prevent al-Qaida from regenerating in Afghanistan and of suppressing threats posed by other extremist groups such as the Islamic State group’s Afghanistan affiliate. The Taliban are enemies of the Islamic State group but retain links to a diminished al-Qaida.

The speed with which the Taliban captured Kabul on Aug. 15 caught the Biden administration by surprise. It forced the U.S. to empty its embassy and frantically accelerate an evacuation effort that featured an extraordinary airlift executed mainly by the U.S. Air Force, with American ground forces protecting the airfield. The airlift began in such chaos that a number of Afghans died on the airfield, including at least one who attempted to cling to the airframe of a C-17 transport plane as it sped down the runway.

By the evacuation’s conclusion, well over 100,000 people, mostly Afghans, had been flown to safety. The dangers of carrying out such a mission came into tragic focus last week when the suicide bomber struck outside an airport gate.

Speaking shortly after that attack, Biden stuck to his view that ending the war was the right move. The war’s start was an echo of a promise President George W. Bush made while standing atop of the rubble in New York City three days after hijacked airliners slammed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center.

Less than a month later, on Oct. 7, Bush launched the war. The Taliban’s forces were overwhelmed and Kabul fell in a matter of weeks. A U.S.-installed government led by Hamid Karzai took over, and bin Laden and his al-Qaida cohort escaped across the border into Pakistan.

The initial plan was to extinguish bin Laden’s al-Qaida, which had used Afghanistan as a staging base for its attack on the United States. The grander ambition was to fight a “Global War on Terrorism” based on the belief that military force could somehow defeat Islamic extremism. Afghanistan was but the first round of that fight. Bush chose to make Iraq the next, invading in 2003 and getting mired in an even deadlier conflict that made Afghanistan a secondary priority until Barack Obama assumed the White House in 2009 and later that year decided to escalate in Afghanistan.

Obama pushed U.S. troop levels to 100,000, but the war dragged on though bin Laden was killed in Pakistan in 2011.

When Donald Trump entered the White House in 2017, he wanted to withdraw from Afghanistan but was persuaded not only to stay but to add several thousand U.S. troops and escalate attacks on the Taliban. Two years later his administration was looking for a deal with the Taliban, and in February 2020 the two sides signed an agreement that called for a complete U.S. withdrawal by May 2021. In exchange, the Taliban made a number of promises including a pledge not to attack U.S. troops.

Biden weighed advice from members of his national security team who argued for retaining the 2,500 troops who were in Afghanistan by the time he took office in January. But in mid-April he announced his decision to fully withdraw.

The Taliban pushed an offensive that by early August toppled key cities, including provincial capitals. The Afghan army largely collapsed, sometimes surrendering rather than taking a final stand, and shortly after President Ashraf Ghani fled the capital, the Taliban rolled into Kabul and assumed control on Aug. 15.

Some parts of the country modernized during the U.S. war years, and life for many Afghans, especially women and girls, improved measurably. But Afghanistan remains a tragedy, poor, unstable and with many of its people fearing a return to the brutality the country endured when the Taliban ruled from 1996 to 2001.

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 07:37PM
https://ift.tt/3DvrANz

With Afghanistan withdrawal complete, America's longest war ends - WDAM
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

A small protein helps flowers to complete their development correctly - Tech Explorist

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

How flowers form correctly within a limited time frame has been a mystery, at least until now. Scientists from the Nara Institute of Science and Technology and Nanjing University have solved this mystery. They discovered a multi-functional protein plays a significant role in ensuring the proper formation of the floral reproductive organ. This protein helps flowers to complete their development correctly and in a timely way.

During the early stages of flower development, stem cells provide the cell source for floral organ formation. In floral meristems, stem cell activities are maintained via a feedback loop between WUSCHEL (WUS), a gene that identifies floral stem cells, and CLAVATA3 (CLV3), a stem cell marker gene that is activated and sustained by WUS.

The repression of WUS by a protein called KNUCKLES (KNU) prompts the completion of floral stem cell activity correctly and in a timely way.

Erlei Shang, the lead author of the study, said, “What isn’t fully understood is how the robust floral stem cell activity finishes within a limited period to ensure carpel development.”

Senior author Toshiro Ito said, “The team’s research revealed that in Arabidopsis thaliana, KNU could completely deactivate the robust floral meristems at a particular floral stage.”

early stage flower of Arabidopsis thaliana
An early stage flower of Arabidopsis thaliana. Using confocal microscopy, Shang Erlei et al. found that KNUCKLES (KNU), encoding a C2H2-type zinc finger repressor, expresses in floral meristem (shown in red) from floral stage 6 and overlaps with the stem cell marker gene CLVTAVA3 (CLV3) expressing cells (shown in green). Further, KNU directly repressed CLV3 and mediates a regulatory framework for the timely controlled floral meristem determinacy. Credit: Bo Sun

KNU carries multiple functions via its position-specific roles. KNU both represses and silences WUS and directly represses CLV3 and CLV1 (a gene that encodes a receptor for the CLV3 peptide). As a result, KNU eliminates the CLV3-WUS feedback loop via transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms. Also, the interaction of KNU with WUS protein disrupts the interactions required for the maintenance of floral meristems.

The corresponding author Bo Sun said, “Our results reveal a regulatory pathway where KNU plays a key role in supporting the completion of floral meristem development within a short time window and ensures that flower reproductive organs are properly formed.”

Scientists noted, “This research will be useful for genetic studies of food crops and global food production. The results of this research will be useful for genetic studies of food crop species such as rice, tomatoes, and maize.”

Journal Reference:
  1. Robust control of floral meristem determinacy by position-specific multifunctions of KNUCKLES, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2102826118

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 02:39PM
https://ift.tt/3yxymPh

A small protein helps flowers to complete their development correctly - Tech Explorist
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

With Afghanistan withdrawal complete, America's longest war ends - KBTX

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States has completed its withdrawal from Afghanistan, ending America’s longest war and closing a chapter in military history likely to be remembered for colossal failures, unfulfilled promises and a frantic final exit that cost the lives of more than 180 Afghans and 13 U.S. service members, some barely older than the war.

Hours before President Joe Biden’s Tuesday deadline for shutting down a final airlift, and thus ending the U.S. war, Air Force transport planes carried a remaining contingent of troops from Kabul airport late Monday. Thousands of troops had spent a harrowing two weeks protecting the airlift of tens of thousands of Afghans, Americans and others seeking to escape a country once again ruled by Taliban militants.

In announcing the completion of the evacuation and war effort. Gen. Frank McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command, said the last planes took off from Kabul airport at 3:29 p.m. Washington time, or one minute before midnight in Kabul. He said some American citizens, likely numbering in “the very low hundreds,” were left behind, and that he believes they will still be able to leave the country.

Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne, was the last soldier to leave...
Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne, was the last soldier to leave Afghanistan as the U.S. withdrew.(Source: DOD/CNN)

Secretary of State Antony Blinken put the number of Americans left behind at under 200, “likely closer to 100,” and said the State Department would keep working to get them out. He praised the military-led evacuation as heroic and said the U.S. diplomatic presence would shift to Doha, Qatar.

Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security adviser, said Tuesday that the mission to get Americans out of Afghanistan continues.

“It’s just that it has shifted from a military mission to a diplomatic mission,” Sullivan said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” He cited “considerable leverage” over the Taliban to get Americans out.

Biden was set to address the nation on Afghanistan later Tuesday.

Biden said in a written statement Monday that military commanders unanimously favored ending the airlift, not extending it. He said he asked Blinken to coordinate with international partners in holding the Taliban to their promise of safe passage for Americans and others who want to leave in the days ahead.

The airport had become a U.S.-controlled island, a last stand in a 20-year war that claimed more than 2,400 American lives.

The closing hours of the evacuation were marked by extraordinary drama. American troops faced the daunting task of getting final evacuees onto planes while also getting themselves and some of their equipment out, even as they monitored repeated threats — and at least two actual attacks — by the Islamic State group’s Afghanistan affiliate. A suicide bombing on Aug. 26 killed 13 American service members and some 169 Afghans. More died in various incidents during the airport evacuation.

The final pullout fulfilled Biden’s pledge to end what he called a “forever war” that began in response to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and rural Pennsylvania. His decision, announced in April, reflected a national weariness of the Afghanistan conflict. Now he faces criticism at home and abroad, not so much for ending the war as for his handling of a final evacuation that unfolded in chaos and raised doubts about U.S. credibility.

The U.S. war effort at times seemed to grind on with no endgame in mind, little hope for victory and minimal care by Congress for the way tens of billions of dollars were spent for two decades. The human cost piled up — tens of thousands of Americans injured in addition to the dead.

More than 1,100 troops from coalition countries and more than 100,000 Afghan forces and civilians died, according to Brown University’s Costs of War project.

In Biden’s view the war could have ended 10 years ago with the U.S. killing of Osama bin Laden, whose al-Qaida extremist network planned and executed the 9/11 plot from an Afghanistan sanctuary. Al-Qaida has been vastly diminished, preventing it thus far from again attacking the United States.

Congressional committees, whose interest in the war waned over the years, are expected to hold public hearings on what went wrong in the final months of the U.S. withdrawal. Why, for example, did the administration not begin earlier the evacuation of American citizens as well as Afghans who had helped the U.S. war effort?

It was not supposed to end this way. The administration’s plan, after declaring its intention to withdraw all combat troops, was to keep the U.S. Embassy in Kabul open, protected by a force of about 650 U.S. troops, including a contingent that would secure the airport along with partner countries. Washington planned to give the now-defunct Afghan government billions more to prop up its army.

Biden now faces doubts about his plan to prevent al-Qaida from regenerating in Afghanistan and of suppressing threats posed by other extremist groups such as the Islamic State group’s Afghanistan affiliate. The Taliban are enemies of the Islamic State group but retain links to a diminished al-Qaida.

The speed with which the Taliban captured Kabul on Aug. 15 caught the Biden administration by surprise. It forced the U.S. to empty its embassy and frantically accelerate an evacuation effort that featured an extraordinary airlift executed mainly by the U.S. Air Force, with American ground forces protecting the airfield. The airlift began in such chaos that a number of Afghans died on the airfield, including at least one who attempted to cling to the airframe of a C-17 transport plane as it sped down the runway.

By the evacuation’s conclusion, well over 100,000 people, mostly Afghans, had been flown to safety. The dangers of carrying out such a mission came into tragic focus last week when the suicide bomber struck outside an airport gate.

Speaking shortly after that attack, Biden stuck to his view that ending the war was the right move. The war’s start was an echo of a promise President George W. Bush made while standing atop of the rubble in New York City three days after hijacked airliners slammed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center.

Less than a month later, on Oct. 7, Bush launched the war. The Taliban’s forces were overwhelmed and Kabul fell in a matter of weeks. A U.S.-installed government led by Hamid Karzai took over, and bin Laden and his al-Qaida cohort escaped across the border into Pakistan.

The initial plan was to extinguish bin Laden’s al-Qaida, which had used Afghanistan as a staging base for its attack on the United States. The grander ambition was to fight a “Global War on Terrorism” based on the belief that military force could somehow defeat Islamic extremism. Afghanistan was but the first round of that fight. Bush chose to make Iraq the next, invading in 2003 and getting mired in an even deadlier conflict that made Afghanistan a secondary priority until Barack Obama assumed the White House in 2009 and later that year decided to escalate in Afghanistan.

Obama pushed U.S. troop levels to 100,000, but the war dragged on though bin Laden was killed in Pakistan in 2011.

When Donald Trump entered the White House in 2017, he wanted to withdraw from Afghanistan but was persuaded not only to stay but to add several thousand U.S. troops and escalate attacks on the Taliban. Two years later his administration was looking for a deal with the Taliban, and in February 2020 the two sides signed an agreement that called for a complete U.S. withdrawal by May 2021. In exchange, the Taliban made a number of promises including a pledge not to attack U.S. troops.

Biden weighed advice from members of his national security team who argued for retaining the 2,500 troops who were in Afghanistan by the time he took office in January. But in mid-April he announced his decision to fully withdraw.

The Taliban pushed an offensive that by early August toppled key cities, including provincial capitals. The Afghan army largely collapsed, sometimes surrendering rather than taking a final stand, and shortly after President Ashraf Ghani fled the capital, the Taliban rolled into Kabul and assumed control on Aug. 15.

Some parts of the country modernized during the U.S. war years, and life for many Afghans, especially women and girls, improved measurably. But Afghanistan remains a tragedy, poor, unstable and with many of its people fearing a return to the brutality the country endured when the Taliban ruled from 1996 to 2001.

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 07:37PM
https://ift.tt/3t8S2b1

With Afghanistan withdrawal complete, America's longest war ends - KBTX
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Biden’s Chaotic Withdrawal from Afghanistan Is Complete - The New Yorker

PHA set to complete NC Five construction in fall - Temple News

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com
The Philadelphia Housing Authority has completed the third phase of construction on the Norris Apartments, located on 11th Street near Norris and Berks. | MICAH ZIMMERMAN / THE TEMPLE NEWS

The Philadelphia Housing Authority is set to complete construction of the NC Five apartment complex, located on Berks Street near 10th, by Oct. 1. 

The construction is part of the Philadelphia Housing Authority’s jurisdiction, northeast of Temple University’s campus and it is the fifth phase of the PHA’s North Central Choice Neighborhood: Housing Plan, a five-phase project to provide affordable housing for the North Central Philadelphia neighborhood. 

PHA owns the construction, but Rose Community Management is in charge of finding tenants and maintaining the building, said Pat Coley, community manager of the property.

“Our construction crews are definitely working on the final touches,” Coley said. “We are going through our closing punch list to sign over the property for residency.”

The goal of the project is to house local Philadelphia residents that belong to the Rental Assistance Demonstration program of PHA, which provides affordable housing to community members. The RAD program will get help from public housing agencies and city public equity to give community members access to long-term homes and sometimes home ownership, Coley said. 

NC Five apartments will also utilize the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program that is a part of the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency, Coley said.

“Many of the units have tax credit, which means there is a subsidy on the house,” said Donna Richardson, Norris Community Council president. “You get a four bedroom house with two baths, and where you have to pay $2,500 around the city, you only have to pay between $900 to $1,200. It gives people housing they cannot normally afford.”

Other units within the complex are available for anyone, including Temple students, Coley said. 

The building is replacing a 147-unit low-rise public housing development that was built in the late 1950s, The Temple News reported

“There were 147 homes present, and we asked to be given 147 units of the construction back to the people at PHA, and they did that,” Richardson said.

The building will be used for residential units with the potential of one commercial space. 

“Ninety-nine point nine percent of the building will be residential, but we want to have one commercial space on the bottom floor,” Coley said. “Hopefully it’s a coffee shop.” 

The building will also offer studio apartments, as well as apartments ranging in size from one to three bedrooms, Coley said.

The COVID-19 pandemic did not have a large effect on the construction of the complex but did stall construction crews during the initial shutdown in 2020, Coley said.

North Central businesses are not affected by the construction of the complex on the east side of Temple University, employees at local businesses said.

“There is always a lot of construction happening around here,” said Lena Idrissi who works at Pharmacy of America IV on 9th street near Norris and Berks. “We do not really notice anything new, but we will take the new people around.” 

Tenants from PHA and from Rose Community Management, will be allowed to move into the new building once construction checklists are finalized and once residential inspections are completed, Coley said. 

“As long as we were given our 147 units back, we are happy, and the units can be filled with Temple students or Philly residents,” Richardson said.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 04:00PM
https://ift.tt/38r4zNp

PHA set to complete NC Five construction in fall - Temple News
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Taliban celebrate 'complete independence' as last U.S. troops leave Afghanistan - Reuters Australia

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

(Reuters) -Celebratory gunfire resounded across Kabul on Tuesday as Taliban fighters took control of the airport before dawn, after the withdrawal of the last U.S. troops, marking the end of a 20-year war that left the Islamist militia stronger than it was in 2001.

Shaky video footage distributed by the Taliban showed fighters entering the airport after the last U.S. troops flew out on a C-17 aircraft a minute before midnight, ending a hasty and humiliating exit for Washington and its NATO allies.

“It is a historical day and a historical moment,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told a news conference at the airport after the troops left. “We are proud of these moments, that we liberated our country from a great power.”

An image from the Pentagon taken with night-vision optics showed the last U.S. soldier here to step aboard the final evacuation flight out of Kabul - Major General Chris Donahue, commander of the 82nd Airborne Division.

America's longest war here took the lives of nearly 2,500 U.S. troops and an estimated 240,000 Afghans, and cost some $2 trillion.

Although it succeeded in driving the Taliban from power and stopped Afghanistan being used as a base by al Qaeda to attack the United States, it ended with the hardline Islamist militants controlling more territory than during their previous rule.

Those years from 1996 to 2001 saw the Taliban's brutal enforcement of a strict interpretation of Islamic law, and the world watches now here to see if the movement forms a more moderate and inclusive government in the months ahead.

Thousands of Afghans have already fled, fearing Taliban reprisals. More than 123,000 people were evacuated from Kabul in a massive but chaotic airlift by the United States and its allies over the past two weeks, but tens of thousands who helped Western nations during the war were left behind.

A contingent of Americans, estimated by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken as fewer than 200, and possibly closer to 100, wanted to leave but were unable to get on the last flights.

Slideshow ( 5 images )

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab put the number of UK nationals in Afghanistan in the low hundreds, following the evacuation of some 5,000.

General Frank McKenzie, commander of the U.S. Central Command, told a Pentagon briefing that the chief U.S. diplomat in Afghanistan here, Ross Wilson, was on the last C-17 flight out.

“There’s a lot of heartbreak associated with this departure,” McKenzie told reporters. “We did not get everybody out that we wanted to get out. But I think if we’d stayed another 10 days, we wouldn’t have gotten everybody out.”

As the U.S. troops departed, they destroyed more than 70 aircraft, dozens of armoured vehicles and disabled air defences that had thwarted an attempted Islamic State rocket attack on the eve of their departure.

“NATIONAL DISGRACE”

In a statement, President Joe Biden defended his decision to stick to Tuesday’s withdrawal deadline. He said the world would hold the Taliban to their commitment to allow safe passage for those wanting to leave Afghanistan.

“Now, our 20-year military presence in Afghanistan has ended,” said Biden, who thanked the U.S. military for carrying out the dangerous evacuation. He plans to address the American people on Tuesday afternoon.

Biden has said the United States long ago achieved its objectives set in ousting the Taliban in 2001 for harboring al Qaeda militants who masterminded the Sept. 11 attacks.

Slideshow ( 5 images )

He has drawn heavy criticism here from Republicans and some fellow Democrats for his handling of Afghanistan since the Taliban took over Kabul this month after a lightning advance and the collapse of the U.S.-backed government.

Senator Ben Sasse, a Republican member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, called the U.S. withdrawal a “national disgrace” that was “the direct result of President Biden’s cowardice and incompetence”.

But on Twitter, Democratic Senator Sheldon Whitehouse said, “Bravo to our diplomats, military, and intelligence agencies. An airlift of 120,000 people in that dangerous and tumultuous situation is something no one else could do.”

Blinken said the United States was prepared to work with the new Taliban government if it did not carry out reprisals against opponents in the country.

“The Taliban seeks international legitimacy and support,” he said. “Our position is any legitimacy and support will have to be earned.”

Mujahid said the Taliban wanted to establish diplomatic relations with the U.S. despite two decades of hostility.

“The Islamic Emirate wants to have good diplomatic relations with the whole world,” he said.

Neighbouring Pakistan’s foreign minister, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, said he expected a new Afghan government to emerge shortly.

“We expect that a consensus government will be formed in the coming days in Afghanistan,” he told a news conference in the capital, Islamabad.

The Taliban must revive a war-shattered economy without being able to count on the billions of dollars in foreign aid that flowed to the previous ruling elite and fed systemic corruption.

People living outside its cities face what U.N. officials have called a catastrophic humanitarian situation here, worsened by a severe drought.

Reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Steven Coates and Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Clarence Fernandez

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 30, 2021 at 11:57AM
https://ift.tt/38qlz6m

Taliban celebrate 'complete independence' as last U.S. troops leave Afghanistan - Reuters Australia
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

US troops leave Afghanistan; Weld continues efforts to get former colleague out - West Virginia MetroNews

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The United States has ended its nearly 20 years in Afghanistan with the withdrawal of the final troops from Kabul on Monday.

The effort met President Joe Biden’s Aug. 31 deadline to complete the military mission in Afghanistan, which ended with the Taliban ruling over the country. American troops had spent the final weeks transporting soldiers and evacuating Afghan refugees and allies.

According to the White House, service members evacuated 120,000 soldiers and allies from Afghanistan over the past 17 days.

Sen. Ryan Weld, R-Brooke (File)

Sen. Ryan Weld, R-Brooke, served in Afghanistan from October 2010 to July 2011 as part of the U.S. Air Force Reserve. He built multiple relationships with Afghan citizens, including one colleague and his family whom Weld has tried to get out of the country.

“Myself and a former teammate — we have been working this together — we have now transitioned into finding potential routes out on the ground into crossing the border into a neighboring a country or getting them a civilian flight that may or may not be flown into Kabul,” Weld said on Monday’s “MetroNews Talkline.”

“We don’t know what the status is and what the activity is going to look like at the airport after tomorrow. That is a difficult thing to plan for.”

Weld has contacted several embassies located in Afghanistan’s neighboring countries, but most countries are not accepting Afghans.

“That kind of leaves Pakistan, but it’s easier said than done,” he said. “There’s a lot of danger in getting there.”

Weld said he will continue working on trying to get his former colleague and their family out of the nation, but it should not have to be his responsibility.

“This administration should have got this done,” he said. “I’ve said this a thousand times before: Now is not the time to delve into the politics of this and start throwing things around. But this should not have been our responsibility. This should have been taken care of, and because it wasn’t, it has fallen on us. And we’re happy to take up the mantle, but it’s much more difficult with us doing so than the full weight of the United States government trying to do the same.”

The president will address the country at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday about troops leaving Afghanistan.

Adblock test (Why?)



"colleague" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 11:13AM
https://ift.tt/3gOQDl7

US troops leave Afghanistan; Weld continues efforts to get former colleague out - West Virginia MetroNews
"colleague" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Uvr5Ps
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Manilla Rolls Out Monarchs Complete Fall and Spring Schedules - Old Dominion University - Old Dominion University

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com
NORFOLK, Va. – Old Dominion women's tennis head coach Dominic Manilla announced the Monarchs complete schedule for the fall, as well as the spring on Monday. In all, ODU will compete in six different fall events and have 22 dual matches in the spring.
 
Thirteen of those 22 spring matches will take place at the Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center. Eleven of ODU's opponents in the spring ended last season nationally ranked by the ITA. The Monarchs will take on nine Power Five schools in the spring and six in-state foes.
 
"This year's schedule is demanding," said Manilla. "With Rice and FIU earning the top mid major recruiting classes in the nation, recruiting just isn't enough. We need to recruit top players and be absolutely committed to developing them even further."
 
In the fall, the Monarchs will have student-athletes playing the Wahoowa Invitational, North Carolina Ranked +1, ITA Regionals, ITA All-Americans and ITA Super Regionals with the possibility of the Oracle ITA Fall National Championships in early November to close out the fall slate.
 
In the spring, Old Dominion will host Penn State, Virginia Tech, Missouri, Temple, Harvard, Kennesaw State, Norfolk State, East Carolina, William & Mary, VCU, Navy, James Madison and Charlotte. To begin March, the Monarchs will have four straight homes matches and then all six regular season matches in April will take place at the Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center.
 
ODU will travel to Virginia, Georgia Tech, Florida, Miami, Kansas, Navy, Princeton and Columbia, while also having a neutral site match against either Michigan or Ole Miss as part of the ITA Kickoff in Atlanta.
 
"This schedule will help develop our players and the program even more prominently at the national level," concluded Manilla. "Our players and staff will be pushed every week. The goal is to improve and to be playing our best tennis in April and May."
 
The Conference USA Tournament will take place April 21-24 in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
 
Last season marked Old Dominion's second ever conference championship and first ever in Conference USA. Last year's NCAA tournament appearance was the third in program history. Old Dominion then picked up its first win in program history in the NCAA Tournament after taking down No. 33 nationally ranked Arkansas by a 4-2 score in the First Round. ODU ended the season nationally ranked No. 30.
 
2021 Fall Schedule:
Sept. 17-19: Wahoowa Invitational (Charlottesville, Va.)
Sept. 24-26: North Carolina Ranked +1 (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Oct. 1-4: ITA Regionals (Lynchburg, Va.)
Oct. 4-10: ITA All-Americans (Charleston, S.C.)
Oct. 22-25: ITA Super Regionals (Charlottesville, Va.)
Nov. 4-7: Oracle ITA Fall National Championships (San Diego, Calif.)
 
2022 Spring Schedule:
Jan. 16: Penn State (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
Jan. 23: at Virginia (Charlottesville, Va.)
Jan. 28: at Georgia Tech (ITA Kickoff Weekend in Atlanta, Ga.)
Jan. 29: vs. Michigan OR Ole Miss (ITA Kickoff Weekend in Atlanta, Ga.) 
Feb. 3: at Florida (Gainesville, Fla.)
Feb. 5: at Miami (Coral Gables, Fla.)
Feb. 18: Virginia Tech (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
Feb. 20: at Kansas (Lawrence, Kan.)
Feb. 25: Missouri (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
March 5: Temple (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
March 6: Harvard (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
March 10: Kennesaw State (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
March 10: Norfolk State (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
March 24: at Navy (Annapolis, Md.)
March 25: at Princeton (Princeton, N.J.)
March 27: at Columbia (New York City, N.Y.)
April 2: East Carolina (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
April 3: William & Mary (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
April 8: VCU (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
April 10: Navy (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
April 16: James Madison (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
April 17: Charlotte* (Folkes-Stevens Tennis Center)
April 21-24: C-USA Tournament (Murfreesboro, Tenn.)
 
Home matches in bold
*Indicates a C-USA match
 
 
Print Friendly Version

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 01:14AM
https://ift.tt/3sYHE5L

Manilla Rolls Out Monarchs Complete Fall and Spring Schedules - Old Dominion University - Old Dominion University
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Crosswalk upgrades complete near Gilroy High School - Gilroy Dispatch

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

Work wrapped up recently on various upgrades to the crosswalk at the intersection of West 10th Street and Orchard Drive.

Curb extensions, refuge areas to provide a shortened pedestrian crossing distance and green bike lanes are among the additions for the crosswalk that is heavily used by students at the adjacent Gilroy High School. Pedestrians can also activate a flashing light to warn vehicles that they are about to cross.

The Gilroy City Council in June approved a $150,895 contract with Golden Bay Construction for the project. The Gilroy Unified School District will share half of the costs with the city.

Green bike lanes and other striping were added to the intersection. Photo: Tarmo Hannula

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 04:12AM
https://ift.tt/3jwjUCK

Crosswalk upgrades complete near Gilroy High School - Gilroy Dispatch
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Monday, August 30, 2021

The US Withdrawal From Afghanistan: The Taliban Celebrate - NPR

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com

Taliban fighters wave from the back of a pickup truck, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, Aug. 30, 2021. Many Afghans are anxious about the Taliban rule and are figuring out ways to get out of Afghanistan. Khwaja Tawfiq Sediqi/AP

Khwaja Tawfiq Sediqi/AP

KABUL, Afghanistan — Taliban fighters watched the last U.S. planes disappear into the sky over Afghanistan around midnight Monday and then fired their guns into the air, celebrating victory after a 20-year insurgency that drove the world's most powerful military out of one of the poorest countries.

The departure of the U.S. cargo planes marked the end of a massive airlift in which tens of thousands of people fled Afghanistan, fearful of the return of Taliban rule after the militants took over most of the country and rolled into the capital earlier this month.

"The last five aircraft have left, it's over!" said Hemad Sherzad, a Taliban fighter stationed at Kabul's international airport. "I cannot express my happiness in words. ... Our 20 years of sacrifice worked."

In Washington, Gen. Frank McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command, announced the completion of America's longest war and the evacuation effort, saying the last planes took off from Kabul airport at 3:29 p.m. EDT — one minute before midnight Monday in Kabul.

"We did not get everybody out that we wanted to get out," he said.

With its last troops gone, the U.S. ended its 20-year war with the Taliban back in power. Many Afghans remain fearful of their rule or of further instability, and there have been sporadic reports of killings and other abuses in areas under Taliban control despite the group's pledges to restore peace and security.

"American soldiers left the Kabul airport, and our nation got its full independence," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said early Tuesday.

The U.S. and its allies invaded Afghanistan shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attack on the United States, which al-Qaida orchestrated while sheltering under Taliban rule. The invasion drove the Taliban from power in a matter of weeks and scattered Osama bin Laden and other top al-Qaida leaders.

The U.S. and its allies launched an ambitious effort to rebuild Afghanistan after decades of war, investing billions of dollars in a Western-style government and security forces. Women, who had been largely confined to their homes under the Taliban's hard-line rule, benefited from access to education and came to assume prominent roles in public life.

But the Taliban never went away.

In the coming years, as the U.S. focused on another troubled war in Iraq and the Afghan government became mired in corruption, the Taliban regrouped in the countryside and in neighboring Pakistan. In recent years, they seized large parts of rural Afghanistan and carried out near-daily assaults on Afghan security forces.

Eager to end the war, the Trump administration signed a peace deal with the Taliban in February 2020 that paved the way for the withdrawal. President Joe Biden extended the deadline from May to August and continued with the pullout despite the Taliban's rapid blitz across the country earlier this month.

Now the Taliban control all of Afghanistan except for the mountainous Panjshir province, where a few thousand local fighters and remnants of Afghanistan's collapsed security forces have pledged to resist them. The Taliban say they are seeking a peaceful resolution there.

They face much graver challenges now that they govern one of the poorest and most war-ravaged nations on Earth.

In recent days Afghans have lined up outside banks as an economic crisis that predates the Taliban takeover worsens. A string of attacks by the Islamic State extremist group's local affiliate, including a barrage of rockets fired at the airport Monday, shows the security challenges the Taliban face.

On Thursday, an Islamic State suicide attack at an airport gate killed at least 169 Afghans and 13 U.S. service members. The extremist group is far more radical than the Taliban, and the two groups have fought each other before. The Taliban say they will prevent Afghanistan from again being used as a base for terror attacks, a pledge that will likely be tested soon.

McKenzie said the Taliban were "significantly helpful" in enabling the airlift but will have difficulty securing Kabul in the coming days, not least because of the threat they face from IS. He said the Taliban had freed IS fighters from prisons, swelling their ranks to an estimated 2,000.

"Now they are going to be able to reap what they sowed," the American general said.

Many Afghans fear the Taliban themselves, who governed the country under a harsh interpretation of Islamic law from 1996 until 2001. In those years they banned television and music, barred women from attending school or working outside the home, and carried out public executions.

The Taliban have sought to project a more moderate image since the takeover. They say women will be able to attend school and work, and have renounced any revenge attacks on Afghans who worked with the former government, the U.S. or its allies.

Many Afghans are deeply skeptical of such promises, and fear of the Taliban's rule drove tens of thousands to flee the country over the past two weeks. Thousands more waited in vain outside the airport, many of them standing for hours in a sewage canal.

The Kabul international airport had been one of the few ways out. At one point people flooded onto the tarmac and seven fell to their deaths after clinging to a plane that was taking off. Another seven died in a stampede of people outside an airport gate.

The Taliban have said they will allow normal travel, but it is unclear how they will run the airport and which commercial carriers will begin flying in, given security concerns.

Qatar, a close U.S. ally that has long hosted a Taliban political office, has been taking part in negotiations about operations at the airport with Afghan and international parties, mainly the U.S. and Turkey. Qatari Assistant Foreign Minister Lolwa al-Khater said its main priority is restoring regular operations while maintaining security at the airport.

The last known U.S. military operation in Afghanistan came Sunday, when American officials said a drone strike blew up a vehicle carrying IS suicide bombers who were planning to attack the airport.

But like so much about the Afghanistan war, it may not have gone as planned.

Relatives of those killed in Sunday's strike said it killed civilians who had nothing to do with the extremist group.

Najibullah Ismailzada said his brother-in-law, Zemarai Ahmadi, had just arrived home from his job working with a Korean charity. As he drove into the garage, his children came out to greet him, and that is when the missile struck.

"We lost 10 members of our family," Ismailzada said, including six children raging in age from 2 to 8. He said another relative, Naser Nejrabi, who was a former soldier in the Afghan army and a former interpreter for the U.S. military, also was killed, along with two teenagers.

U.S. officials have acknowledged the reports of civilian casualties without confirming them.

Hours before the withdrawal was complete, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the U.S. military takes steps to avoid civilian casualties when carrying out targeted strikes.

"Of course, the loss of life from anywhere is horrible, and it impacts families no matter where they're living, in the United States or around the world," she said.

Adblock test (Why?)



"complete" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 07:11AM
https://ift.tt/38q9n5F

The US Withdrawal From Afghanistan: The Taliban Celebrate - NPR
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP

Search

Featured Post

Côte-Saint-Luc first responders fundraise for colleague on life support in Barbados - CBC.ca

nnnindonesia.blogspot.com First responders in Côte-Saint-Luc are worried and heartbroken after their colleague, volunteer Clifford Jordan, ...

Postingan Populer