US embassy asked to dispose of sensitive material as Taliban advance

US embassy asked to dispose of sensitive material as Taliban advance
In a sign of mounting concerns for the safety of one of the largest US embassies in the world, staff have been ordered to dispose of sensitive material that could be used as propaganda by the Taliban, including items with embassy logos or US flags.
2 min read
The order came in a memorandum to staff in the embassy [AFP via Getty]]

The US embassy in Kabul on Friday ordered staff to get rid of sensitive material that could be used for Taliban propaganda as the insurgents rapidly advanced in Afghanistan.

In a memorandum to staff, a facility manager at the sprawling embassy directed employees to incinerators and other disposal sites for documents and equipment.

"Please also include items with embassy or agency logos, American flags or items which could be misused in propaganda efforts," the memo said.

A State Department spokesperson said that the embassy in Kabul was conducting a "drawdown."

"Drawdowns at our diplomatic posts around the world follow a standard operating procedure designed to minimise our footprint across various categories, including staffing, equipment and supplies," the spokesperson said.

The memorandum is the latest sign of mounting concerns for the safety of one of the largest US embassies in the world after President Joe Biden ordered a withdrawal of US troops after 20 years.

The Taliban on Thursday seized two other major cities, Herat and Kandahar, as they moved closer to the capital.

Biden on Thursday ordered 3,000 troops to the Kabul airport to move out US staff, with preparations underway to shift embassy operations to the airport as needed.

The Pentagon nonetheless said Friday it did not see an "imminent" threat to Kabul.

The Biden administration is expected to take extraordinary precautions to guard US diplomats, mindful of the fierce backlash after an Islamist attack in 2012 on the consulate in Benghazi, Libya left dead four people including the ambassador.