US pauses deployments in Afghanistan, quarantines 1,500 troops

Published March 20, 2020
The US military's top commander in Afghanistan has said that the military is pausing the movement of any new troops into Afghanistan and is quarantining 1,500 troops and civilians who recently arrived to avoid any possible spread of the coronavirus. —AFP/File
The US military's top commander in Afghanistan has said that the military is pausing the movement of any new troops into Afghanistan and is quarantining 1,500 troops and civilians who recently arrived to avoid any possible spread of the coronavirus. —AFP/File

WASHINGTON: The US military is pausing the movement of any new troops into Afghanistan and is quarantining 1,500 troops and civilians who recently arrived to avoid any possible spread of the coronavirus, the top commander in the country said on Thursday.

Troops who are already in the country may have their deployments extended so missions can continue.

The announcement comes as the United States is reducing its troop presence in Afghanistan as part of the peace deal signed last month between the US and the Taliban.

In a tweet, Army General Scott Miller said the military has started new screening procedures for personnel arriving in the country. About 1,500 service members, civilians and contractors who have gone to Afghanistan from various countries in the past week are living in screening facilities.

Miller said most are either new deployments or people returning from leave and they are being quarantined out of an abundance of caution, not because they are sick. He added that the US-led coalition is also limiting access to critical personnel and bases.

So far, 21 US and coalition personnel exhibiting flu-like symptoms are in isolation and receiving medical care. None has tested positive for the coronavirus.

There are more than 12,000 US troops in Afghanistan, but that number is supposed to gradually drop to about 8,600 over the next few months as part of the peace deal.

In Afghanistan, 22 people have been diagnosed with the virus but no deaths have been reported.

Published in Dawn, March 20th, 2020

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