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Virginia jury convicts Afghan man linked to 2021 Kabul airport attack

The attack occurred on ​August 26, 2021, as U.S. forces were evacuating from Afghanistan at the end of America’s longest war.

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A federal jury in Virginia on Wednesday convicted an Afghan man of conspiring to provide material support to ​a terrorist organization in connection with the 2021 suicide ‌bombing at Kabul airport that killed 13 U.S. service members and about 160 Afghan civilians, Reuters reported.

But the jury deadlocked on whether his actions directly ​caused the deaths, sparing the defendant, Mohammad Sharifullah, ​from a possible life sentence. He still faces up ⁠to 20 years in prison. U.S. District Judge Anthony Trenga ​did not immediately set a sentencing date.

The attack occurred on ​August 26, 2021, as U.S. forces were evacuating from Afghanistan at the end of America’s longest war. A suicide bomber detonated an explosive ​vest at Abbey Gate, killing 11 Marines, one Navy corpsman ​and one Army soldier, along with an estimated 160 Afghan civilians, read the report.

Prosecutors said ‌Sharifullah ⁠helped the Daesh group, by conducting reconnaissance and facilitating communications ahead of the attack. Defense attorneys argued the government relied too heavily on Sharifullah’s own statements ​during FBI interrogations ​and failed ⁠to independently prove his role in the bombing.

The case marked the first U.S. criminal trial ​stemming from the Abbey Gate attack, a politically ​charged ⁠episode that has continued to shape debate over how former President Joe Biden’s administration withdrew from Afghanistan, Reuters reported.

Early in President Donald Trump’s ⁠second ​term, Sharifullah was arrested in Pakistan, near ​the Afghan crossing, by Pakistani security forces working with the FBI and ​CIA.

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