August 19, 2021
2 mins read

Key US military biometric devices in Taliban hands

These devices contain iris scans, fingerprints, and biological information. These data are used to access larger databases….reports Asian Lite News

The Taliban have captured the US military’s biometric devices compromising crucial data of the US army and the local Afghans who played crucial roles during the war, a media report said on Wednesday.

The devices, known as HIIDE, for Handheld Interagency Identity Detection Equipment, were seized last week during the Taliban’s offensive, according to a Joint Special Operations Command official and three former US military personnel, all of whom worried that sensitive data they contain could be used by the Taliban, America’s The Intercept reported.

These devices contain iris scans, fingerprints, and biological information. These data are used to access larger databases. However, it remains unclear that how much data has been compromised.

These devices also contain biometric data of those Afghans who helped the US during the war. Now, the Taliban might use these data to identify and target innocent Afghans.

ALSO READ: Johnson, Biden agree on G7 meet over Afghanistan

“We processed thousands of locals a day, had to ID, sweep for suicide vests, weapons, intel gathering, etc.” a U.S. military contractor explained. “(HIIDE) was used as a biometric ID tool to help ID locals working for the coalition,” The Intercept quoted an unnamed US official as saying.

White House believes that the Taliban won’t return US weapons that it captured from Afghan forces, National Security Advisor (NSA) Jake Sullivan said on Tuesday.

Sullivan added that the Biden administration believes that a “fair amount” of the weapons that the US gave to Afghanistan are in the possession of the Taliban, and they don’t expect they will be returned to the US.

“We don’t have a complete picture, obviously, of where every article of defence materials has gone but certainly, a fair amount of it has fallen into the hands of the Taliban, and obviously, we don’t have a sense that they are going to readily hand it over to us at the airport,” he added.

The terror group took control over Afghanistan on Sunday after entering the presidential palace in Kabul. The Taliban leaders are discussing future government plans in Doha and are in touch with the international community and intra-Afghan parties to make government in Afghanistan.

The world is closely watching the unfolding situation in Afghanistan as the countries have scrambled to evacuate its citizen from Afghanistan in an attempt to secure their people. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Biden’s approval rating dips below 50%

ALSO READ: No intelligence failure in Afghanistan, says Biden

Previous Story

India, Vietnam carry out maritime drill in South China Sea

Next Story

India extends full support for annual climate meet

Latest from -Top News

India to send holy relics to Mongolia by 2026

According to the Maha Bodhi Society of India, Arahant Sariputta and Arahant Moggallana were the two principal disciples of Lord Buddha. Revered for their wisdom and spiritual accomplishments, they hold a prominent

India, Uganda vow deeper ties

Minister of State Kirti Vardhan Singh met Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni on Thursday to discuss strengthening India–Uganda ties….reports Asian Lite News Union Minister of State for External Affairs Kirti Vardhan Singh met

India-Mongolia trade nearly doubles

Bilateral trade between India and Mongolia nearly doubles as the two nations mark 70 years of diplomatic ties and deepen their strategic and cultural partnership…reports Asian Lite News Bilateral trade between India

Modi, Ukhnaa seal a golden friendship

India and Mongolia mark 70 years of diplomatic relations with energy, cultural, and development pacts — a partnership rooted in shared Buddhist heritage and growing strategic trust….reports Asian Lite News India and
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Trump cuts funding for Afghan resettlement programs

The cuts affect Afghans who risked their lives by working

US economy grows at annualised 6.5% in Q2

The increase in real GDP in the second quarter reflected