The mastermind thought to have planned the devastating 2021 bombing at Kabul airport has been killed by Afghanistan's ruling Taliban, US officials say.
if they don t deliver by monday close of business, i will serve that subpoena. sandra: this was the worry. bill: two things, the pictures from over the weekend turn your stomach to think about how much equipment was left behind, very little effort to get it out of there. the second thing is the parents who have now been now they know a guy had shoot to kill order told not to take the shot. and they will join us in a little bit here. sandra: more on this ahead with the parents of marine corps staff sergeant hoover, one of the 13 american service members killed in the airport bombing in kabul in august of 2021 coming up in the next hour. bill: a tough loss there. less than two months from now before philadelphia elects a new mayor and votes on all 17 city council members seeking re-election. the off-year ballot comes as crime rises and recent polls show almost 2/3 of voters say
144 people including extended family and charity workers were deemed at risk by the strike and u.s. agreed to resettle them and promised condolence payments. only 11 made it to u.s. 32 still exposed in afghanistan. pay-outs pending. we were very grateful to see the u.s. take some responsibility for what it is done and agreed to do that. a year out and the job is not done. also a year ago the remains of the americans killed in the airport bombing were returned to the u.s. suffering all around. the pentagon explained they continue to respond to the air strike in kabul. late last week secretary of defense austin announced a new plan aimed at mitigating civilian deaths in attacks like these and for this family and friends one year on, they are still grieving the loss. dana. dana: greg palkot, thank you. trace: two 17-year-olds
One year after the U.S. military withdrew its troops from Afghanistan and the Taliban regained control of the country, top lawmakers and White House officials are still clashing over who, or what, is to blame for the collapse of the Afghan government.
The brother of one of the 13 U.S. service members killed in the Kabul airport bombing committed suicide at his memorial, nearly one year after the attack.