In Afghanistan, an Unceremonious End, and a Shrouded Beginning
By Adam Nossiter and Eric Schmitt The last U.S. military plane left Kabul Monday night, ending a presence that spanned two decades but failed to defeat the Taliban and left behind tens of thousands of Afghans. | | News Analysis By Thomas Gibbons-Neff The last American flight from Afghanistan left behind a host of unfulfilled promises and anxious questions about the country's fate. | | By Katy Reckdahl, J. David Goodman and Edgar Sandoval More than a million people, including most in New Orleans, were without electricity, but the city's levees held. | | |
World By Anton Troianovski Experts say the current exodus of journalists and dissidents is the biggest wave of political emigration in the country's post-Soviet history. | | Opinion | Guest Essay By Jeremi Suri Global military dominance has not lived up to its hype for American interests. | | |
By Maya Blackstone and Taylor Turner Hurricane Ida made landfall near Port Fourchon, La., on Sunday, the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, slamming the southeastern coast with dangerous winds and storm surge and leaving most residents without power. | | By The New York Times Pentagon officials acknowledged the possibility of civilian casualties in Kabul, Afghanistan, following a U.S. military drone strike on a vehicle they said was carrying explosives related to an ISIS-K threat on the airport. | | By Reuters Tropical Storm Nora inundated western Mexico with heavy rains and flash floods, leaving at least one person dead and two injured. | | |
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