Your Tuesday Briefing
A C-17 transport plane departing from Kabul at sunset on Monday.Credit…Jim Huylebroek for The New York TimesAn end to the U.S.’s longest war …
A C-17 transport plane departing from Kabul at sunset on Monday.Credit…Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
An end to the U.S.’s longest war
The last U.S. forces left Afghanistan late last night, ending a 20-year occupation that began shortly after Sept. 11, cost over $2 trillion, took more than 170,000 lives and ultimately failed to defeat the Taliban, the Islamist militants who allowed Al Qaeda to operate there.
Five American C-17 cargo jets departed the airport in Kabul just before midnight, completing a hasty evacuation that left behind tens of thousands of Afghans, including former members of the security forces and many who held valid visas to enter the U.S. Dozens of members of Congress have become deeply involved in helping to arrange evacuations.
“A new chapter of America’s engagement with Afghanistan has begun,” Antony Blinken, the U.S. secretary of state, said. “It’s one in which we will lead with our diplomacy. The military mission is over.”
On the ground: Jubilant Taliban fighters and their supporters reveled in victory as the news became clear. Celebratory gunfire broke out across Kabul in the predawn hours early this morning, the arcs of tracer rounds lighting up the night sky. See scenes from Afghanistan.
Analysis: For the fifth time since the Soviet invasion in 1979, one order has collapsed and another has risen, writes our reporter. What has followed each of those times has been a descent into vengeance, score-settling and, eventually, another cycle of disorder and war.
The ripple effects of pandemic disruption
Pandemic-related supply chain disruptions were supposed to be resolved by now. Instead, the world is still short on everything — and is likely to be for some time to come, as delays, shortages and rising costs bedevil businesses large and small.
Just as the coronavirus crisis has proved stubborn and unpredictable, the turmoil in international commerce has gone on longer than many expected, because shortages and delays in some products have made it impossible to make others.
The world has gained a painful lesson in how interconnected economies are across vast distances — how a shipping container that cannot be unloaded in Los Angeles because too many dockworkers are in quarantine is a container that cannot be loaded with soybeans in Iowa, in turn causing a shortage of animal feed in Southeast Asia.
Case study: Kirsten Gjesdal, who owns a kitchen supply store in Brookings, S.D., has had to entirely reconsider how she stocks her goods because of delays. “It’s nuts,” she said. “It’s definitely not getting back to normal.”
Quotable: “There is no end in sight,” said Alan Holland, chief executive of Keelvar, a company based in Cork, Ireland, that makes software used to manage supply chains. “Everybody should be assuming we are going to have an extended period of disruptions.”
Here are the latest pandemic updates and maps.
In other developments:
The E.U. recommended that countries in the bloc place new travel restrictions on unvaccinated visitors from the U.S.
The U.S. has reached a daily average of 100,000 Covid hospitalizations for the first time since the peak this past winter.
Hurricane Ida leaves thousands stranded
Hurricane Ida has left more than a million people, including most residents of New Orleans, without electricity, more than 300,000 without water and some 2,000 in shelters, officials said. At least three people died in the storm, and hundreds called authorities to be rescued.
New Orleans was spared catastrophic flooding, thanks in part to the $14.5 billion flood-protection system built around New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
President Biden promised people in Louisiana and Mississippi that his administration would be there to help them recover from the damage wrought by Hurricane Ida “for as long as it takes.” More than 5,000 National Guard troops have been deployed to help with the search-and-rescue efforts.
First person: In Houma, La., a small city about 60 miles southwest of New Orleans, Jazmine Carter, 20, said she and her parents had watched the scene unfold in horror, as power lines flew around them. “Trees were falling everywhere — it was scary,” she said.
THE LATEST NEWS
Around the World
Iván Duque, the Colombian president, defended his performance amid the pandemic and social strife.
Two decades into Vladimir Putin’s tenure as Russia’s president, opposition figures, rights activists and journalists are fleeing the country to avoid prison.
Activities at a sprawling nuclear complex in North Korea suggest that the country is restarting its nuclear weapons program, the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog said.
Other Big Stories
China has banned children and teenagers from online gaming on school days.
California authorities ordered thousands of people along Lake Tahoe’s shores to evacuate as the Caldor fire intensified.
Jury selection begins today in the trial for fraud of Elizabeth Holmes, who founded the blood testing start-up Theranos.
Sports News
Novak Djokovic began his pursuit of an exclusive Grand Slam as U.S. Open tennis facilities filled with fans for the first time in two years. Follow our live coverage of the tournament.
All U.S. Open spectators must be vaccinated against the coronavirus. But many tennis players have been slow to get their shots.
It took international collaboration and multiple failed attempts for two Afghan Paralympians to make it to the Tokyo Games. Here’s how they did it, and what might come next.
A Morning Read
On the Rolling Stones’ first trip to New York, Charlie Watts’s bandmates hit the Apollo. Watts, the band’s drummer, third from right, instead watched jazz greats at the clubs he had dreamed about as a boy: He saw Charles Mingus at Birdland, Gene Krupa at the Metropole, and Sonny Rollins, Earl Hines and Miles Davis.
ARTS AND IDEAS
The dogs of 9/11
Ricky, a rat terrier, was able to squeeze into tight spaces. Trakr, a German shepherd, combed the wreckage for two days and then collapsed from smoke inhalation, exhaustion and burns. (He recovered.) Riley, a 4-year-old golden retriever, above, helped locate the bodies of several firefighters.
The efforts of hundreds of search-and-rescue dogs who hunted for life in the smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center are being memorialized in an exhibition at the American Kennel Club Museum of the Dog in New York, reports Sarah Bahr.
Though there were not many survivors to find amid the destruction, the devotion of the dogs to their work became an inspiring sight to emergency medical workers and to others who witnessed the urgent rescue effort.
“The search-and-rescue dogs didn’t rescue any people from the pile,” the museum’s executive director said. “But I think they somewhat rescued the people who were searching.”
Read more about the dogs here.
PLAY, WATCH, EAT
What to Cook
This recipe transforms a glut of fresh zucchini into one cup of jammy, caramelized pasta sauce. For more vegetarian recipes, sign up for The Veggie newsletter.
What to Watch
The mini-series “Laetitia” is an anguished, impeccably made mini-series based on a 2011 murder case that riveted France.
Virtual Travel
Mountains, wildflowers, horses: A hike through the Teton Range in Wyoming offers stunning views.
Now Time to Play
Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Religion with the Five Pillars (five letters).
And here is the Spelling Bee.
You can find all our puzzles here.
That’s it for today’s briefing. See you tomorrow. — Natasha
P.S. The Washington Post profiled Maggie Haberman, who went from moonlighting as a bartender to covering the Trump White House.
The latest episode of “The Daily” is about the recall election in California.
You can reach Natasha and the team at [email protected].