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    US troops withdraw from Afghanistan

    Nearly two years after President Barack Obama ordered 33,000 more U.S. troops to Afghanistan to tamp down the escalating Taliban violence, the last of those surge troops have left the country, U.S. officials said Sept. 20.

    1 of 11 photos
    PrevNext
    1. previousU.S. soldiers board a U.S. military plane, as they leave Afghanistan, at the U.S. base in Bagram north of Kabul, Afghanistan. The United States is not alone in pulling combat troops off the Afghan batnext
    PrevNext
    1.  Photo By Musadeq Sadeq, File Tue, Nov 29, 2011 5:33 AM EST
    PrevNext
    1. U.S. soldiers board a U.S. military plane, as they leave Afghanistan, at the U.S. base in Bagram north of Kabul, Afghanistan. The United States is not alone in pulling combat troops off the Afghan battlefield. More than a dozen other countries have draw down plans that combined with the U.S. withdrawal will shrink the foreign military footprint in Afghanistan by more than 40,000 troops by the close of next year. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq, File)
      U.S. soldiers board a U.S. military plane, as they leave Afghanistan, at the U.S. base in Bagram north of Kabul, Afghanistan. The United States is not alone in pulling combat troops off the Afghan battlefield. More than a dozen other countries have draw down plans that combined with the U.S. withdrawal will shrink the foreign military footprint in Afghanistan by more than 40,000 troops by the close of next year. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq, File)

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        40,000 troops to leave Afghanistan by end of 2012
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