"It became a vital military hub during the Soviets’ 10-year occupation of Afghanistan. After the Soviets withdrew in 1989, the Taliban and what was known as the Northern Alliance fought for the base, sometimes with their trenches at either end. By 2001, the United States had inherited rubble at the Bagram site. In January 2002, when the first American service member killed by enemy fire, Sgt. First Class Nathan R. Chapman, was sent home, there were no American flags to drape on his coffin, so a flag patch from someone’s uniform had to suffice. By 2011, at the height of the American war, the air base had ballooned into a small city, with two runways, tens of thousands of occupants, shops and a U.S. military prison that became notorious for its use as a C.I.A. black site...."
July 2, 2021
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2 comments:
Dave Begley writes:
"NYT is disappointed because there are no pictures of Blackhawk helicopters taking off with Afghans hanging on the struts."
Joseph writes:
"Shortly after my Army unit arrived in Kabul in 2010, my NCO and I had to make a trip to Bagram. The distance is about 38 miles by road, 27 miles as the crow flies. We were urged to go by air. That was my first clue into how far the national government’s control extended outside of Kabul, more than eight years in.
"The article mentions the base becoming a small city. That was the strangest part for me. In the middle of it, if you ignored the view, you could forget you were in Afghanistan. Unless you were at the perimeter, it had the feel, artificial but convincing, of a stateside installation. Our unit was there to work with the Afghan National Army, and my days in Bagram were the only ones when I didn’t encounter any Afghans."
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