Antony Blinken says he would blame the president if his child died in the Kabul airport bombing

Antony Blinken said Sunday another attack on the Kabul airport is ‘highly likely’ as he claimed he would also blame the president and military leaders for the deaths of 13 U.S. troops.

‘This is very high risk,’ the secretary of State told ABC’s This Week host Martha Raddatz. ‘There is a high likelihood of additional attacks.’

‘This is the most dangerous time in an already extraordinarily dangerous mission.’

Blinken’s comments come three days after 13 U.S. service members were killed in a suicide bombing outside the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Afghanistan’s capital city of Kabul.

The head of the State Department didn’t deny that the president was to blame for their deaths.

‘There are no words that I can say that, I think, anyone can say to assuage the grief that a parent is feeling at the loss of their child. Nothing,’ he told NBC’s Meet the Press host Chuck Todd in another interview on Sunday morning.

‘And if I were in his shoes, probably I’d feel exactly the same way,’ Blinken added.

He is referencing Steve Nikoui, the father of deceased Marine Lance Corporal Kareem Nikoui, who said: ‘Biden turned his back on [my son].’

Blinken responded to that grief by saying: ‘All I can do is take responsibility for my own actions and do everything possible to continue to bring people out of Afghanistan who want to leave between now and the 31st, and every single day thereafter. That’s my responsibility.’

‘But I, as a parent myself, I feel deeply what he expressed,’ Blinken said. ‘And all I can say is, I’m deeply, deeply sorry.’

Steve Nikoui and Mark Schmitz, the father of fallenMarine Jared Schmitz, both are blaming the Biden administration for their sons’ deaths.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Sunday that he would also blame President Joe Biden and military leaders for the death of the 13 U.S. service members in Kabul if he were the parent of one of the fallen

The father of deceased Marine Kareem Nikoui, pictured left with his mother, was killed on Thursday. His father said he blames Biden for abandoning them in Kabul

The father of deceased Marine Kareem Nikoui, pictured left with his mother, was killed on Thursday. His father said he blames Biden for abandoning them in Kabul

Blinken also told ABC News' Martha Raddatz (left) in a separate interview Sunday that it's 'high risk' there could be another attack at the Kabul airport

Blinken also told ABC News’ Martha Raddatz (left) in a separate interview Sunday that it’s ‘high risk’ there could be another attack at the Kabul airport

Along with the 13 U.S. troops, 170 Afghans were also killed at the airport when a single suicide bomber detonated his vest.

Among them were Navy medic Max Soviak, Army Staff Sgt Ryan Knauss, and Marines Hunter Lopez, Rylee McCollum, David Lee Espinoza, Kareem Nikoui, Jared Schmitz, Daegan Page, Taylor Hoover, Humberto Sanchez and an unnamed special forces soldier. 

McCollum’s wrestling coach and a close family friend told DailyMail.com that ‘heads should roll’ over the debacle. 

Ben Arlotta said he is furious at the Biden administration and blames the White House for putting soldiers in an unnecessarily dangerous position.

‘It’s a junk show, an absolute junk show. Not just for Rylee but for every serviceman and woman over there. They were put in a very terrible spot. In my opinion this entire circumstance has been mismanaged from every level,’ he told DailyMail.com.

‘The only thing I can hope for is that accountability isn’t forgotten. Because for the 13 men who were killed yesterday, heads need to roll for the way things have gone. 

Nikoui’s father Steve told The Daily Beast on Friday: ‘They sent my son over there as a paper pusher and then had the Taliban outside providing security. I blame my own military leaders… Biden turned his back on him. That’s it.’ 

Schmitz’s father, meanwhile, said: ‘Be afraid of our leadership or lack thereof. Pray every day for the soldiers that are putting their lives at risk, doing what they love which is protecting all of us.’ 

White House Secretary Jen Psaki did not mince words when asked on Friday about Biden’s pledge to track down the terrorists responsible for the deadly attack, saying that the president ‘does not want them to live on the earth any more.’ 

Her remarks came a day after Biden vowed that ‘we will hunt you down and make you pay.’ 

Soviak’s sister said in an Instagram post: ‘He was a f****** medic. There to help people and now he is gone and my family will never be the same.’ 

Soviak, believed to be in his early 20s, was named by his high school in Ohio. McCollum was named by his high school in Wyoming while Espinoza, 20, was named by the local police department in Laredo, Texas, where he was born. McCollum was expecting his first child with his wife. He was deployed to Afghanistan in April.  

Nikoui’s father added that he was relieved when his son signed up as a Marine when Trump was in office because he ‘really believed this guy didn’t want to send people into harm’s way.’    

  • The Pentagon revealed it was just one suicide bomb yesterday and not two, killing 170 people
  • Defense chiefs warned of the imminent threat of another ISIS attack in Afghanistan 
  • Britain, France, Denmark and Spain all stopped evacuating citizens; U.S., Turkey and Russia remain
  • Republicans called for Biden’s resignation; House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said he would face a ‘day of reckoning’ 
  • It was revealed that Taliban fighters killed ISIS leader Abu Omar Khorasani when they took control of Bagram prison on August 15, but they also freed ‘thousands’ of ISIS-K fighters 
  • White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki on Friday said the government ‘can’t guarantee’ that all Americans who want to get out will get out of Afghanistan after August 31 
Marine Hunter Lopez, from Coachella Valley, California, was the son of a captain and a deputy with the Riverside County Sheriff's Office

Humberto Sanchez of Indiana was killed in Thursday's attack on Kabul airport

Humberto Sanchez of Indiana was killed in Thursday’s attack on Kabul airport

The first US military officer named as being killed on Thursday at Kabul airport was Navy medic Max Soviak. Soviak, believed to be in his early 20s, was named by his high school, Edison High in Milan, Ohio

Marine Rylee McCollum also died

Navy medic Max Soviak (left) and Marine Rylee McCollum (right) were both killed in the ISIS blast at Kabul airport

Jared Schmitz

David Lee Espinoza

Jared Schmitz (left) and David Lee Espinoza, 20 (right)

Marine Staff Sgt. Taylor Hoover, 31, from Utah, was among the 13 U.S. military personnel killed in the attack on Thursday

Marine Staff Sgt. Taylor Hoover, 31, from Utah, was among the 13 U.S. military personnel killed in the attack on Thursday

Cpl. Daegan William-Tyeler Page, a Marine from Omaha, Nebraska, was killed in an attack by ISIS-K at Kabul airport on Thursday

Cpl. Daegan William-Tyeler Page, a Marine from Omaha, Nebraska, was killed in an attack by ISIS-K at Kabul airport on Thursday

President Joe Biden met with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett in the Oval Office at the White House on Friday. He did not take questions but made a brief statement on Afghanistan, saying it was a 'dangerous but worthy mission'

President Joe Biden met with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett in the Oval Office at the White House on Friday. He did not take questions but made a brief statement on Afghanistan, saying it was a ‘dangerous but worthy mission’ 

Vice President Kamala Harris arrived back at Joint Base Andrews with her husband Doug Emhoff on Friday morning after abandoning plans to campaign in California for Gov. Gavin Newsom to help deal with the unraveling crisis in Afghanistan

Vice President Kamala Harris arrived back at Joint Base Andrews with her husband Doug Emhoff on Friday morning after abandoning plans to campaign in California for Gov. Gavin Newsom to help deal with the unraveling crisis in Afghanistan

Ryan Knauss, 23, from Tennessee, was among the U.S. military personnel named on Friday as having died in the attack.

Knauss’ family and friends said he attended Gibbs High School in Corryton, Tennessee.

He joined the military shortly after graduation, according to 10News. 

His stepmother told the site he loved to laugh, help his wife Alena in her garden, and enjoyed working with his hands to build things. 

He had just finished Psychological Operations training and was hoping to serve in Washington, D.C.  

Evelena Knauss, his paternal grandmother, told The Daily Beast: ‘We were led to think that it was 12 Marines and one Navy, and we knew our grandson was in the Army. 

‘So we were praying for the families of the Marines, not knowing our grandson was one of the ones who lost his life.

‘You just don’t think it will be yours, I’m sure that you’ve heard that before.’

Knauss joined the Army right out of high school, and had already served one nine-month tour in Afghanistan, his grandmother explained.

‘And then he was deployed back on this mission,’ she said.

 ‘He had just completed a course of psychological operations… Making quite impressive steps in the military. Very bright and very committed. Driven… Young.

‘It’s been a very sad day for us. It shouldn’t have had to happen this way.’ 

Ryan Knauss, from Tennessee, was among the 13 U.S. service members who died in Thursday's explosion in Kabul

Knauss was hoping to work in Washington DC after his deployment in Afghanistan. Knauss was hoping to work in Washington DC after his deployment in Afghanistan

Hoover was described by his father Darin as 'my hero'. Hoover is pictured with his mother, Kelly Barnett

Hoover was described by his father Darin as ‘my hero’. Hoover is pictured with his mother, Kelly Barnett

Hoover (center) is pictured at work with fellow soldiers. He was killed in a suicide bombing on Thursday at Kabul airport

Hoover (center) is pictured at work with fellow soldiers. He was killed in a suicide bombing on Thursday at Kabul airport

The 13 U.S. service members killed in the Kabul blast 

Max Soviak, 22, Navy corpsman from Berlin Heights, Ohio

Soviak was a 2017 graduate of Edison High School in Milan, Ohio, where he played football, according before eventually moving to Guam.

Soviak described himself on Instagram as a ‘patriot’ and his pictures showed him enjoying an active lifestyle on boats, beaches, and mountains. 

He was also proud of his military service, posting photos with his fellow servicemen and commenting on photos of his friends.

Rylee McCollum, 20, Lance Corporal in the Marines from Riverton, Wyoming 

McCollum loved the military from the age of three, and at the age of 18 brought his father Jim the enlistment forms to sign.

He loved American history, and enjoyed wrestling, mixed martial arts, and training children in the sport. 

McCollum’s goal after the Marines was to become a history teacher and wrestling coach, his father said.

He married Jiennah in the summer of 2020, and their first child is due in September.  

David Lee Espinoza, 20, a Marine from Laredo, Texas

Espinoza was born in Laredo and grew up in Rio Bravo, attending Lyndon B. Johnson High School in Laredo.

He joined the Marines on leaving high school.

Espinoza was on his second deployment, his mother Elizabeth Holguin told DailyMail.com – adding that he was brave, and wanted to be there. 

Kareem Nikoui, 20, a Marine from Norco, California

Nikoui had sent home a video of himself giving candy to Afghan children the day before he was killed.

His father Steve said Kareem loved the Marines, and was eager to deploy to Afghanistan.

Steve described his son as devoted to his career in the military, but said he was angry at Biden for the way the withdrawal was handled. 

Hunter Lopez, 22, a Marine from Indio, California

Lopez was the son of a captain and a deputy in the Riverside County, California, sheriff’s office, according to a Facebook post by Sheriff Chad Bianco. 

Lopez had planned on following in his parents’ footsteps and becoming a deputy when he returned home, the post said. 

Taylor Hoover, 31, a Staff Sgt in the Marines from Utah

Hoover graduated from Hillcrest High School in 2008, where he played football.

He was described by family and friends as a joy and a ray of light. 

His father said he was his hero. 

Jared Schmitz, 20, a Marine from Wentzville, Missouri

Schmitz was stationed in Jordan on his first deployment and was sent to Afghanistan in recent weeks, his father said.

‘As his parents, of course, we were terrified,’ Schmitz said of his son, a 2019 high school graduate. 

‘I don’t have words for how upset we are.’

Ryan Knauss, 23, an Army Staff Sgt from Knoxville, Tennessee

Knauss attended Gibbs High School before joining the Army.

His stepmother said he loved to laugh, help his wife Alena in her garden, and enjoyed working with his hands to build things.

She said he had just finished Psychological Operations training and was hoping to serve in Washington, D.C. 

Daegan William-Tyeler Page, 23, a Marine from Omaha, Nebraska

Page grew up in Red Oak, Iowa, and the Omaha-metro area. 

A longtime Boy Scout, he joined the U.S. Marine Corps after he graduated from high school according to the statement.

‘He enjoyed playing hockey for Omaha Westside in the Omaha Hockey Club and was a diehard Chicago Blackhawks fan. He loved hunting and spending time outdoors with his dad, as well as being out on the water. He was also an animal lover with a soft spot in his heart for dogs,’ the family said.

Humberto Sanchez, a Marine from Logansport, Indiana

Sanchez’s death was announced by the mayor of Logansport.

He said that Sanchez had not yet even turned 30 and ‘still had his entire life ahead of him.’   

Friends paid tribute to a joker who was always making people laugh. 

Taylor Hoover, from Utah, was also named among the 13.

His father, Darin Hoover, said he was a hero.

‘Soooooo glad I got to see him before he left.’ he said. 

‘I love you son!!! You’re my hero!! Please check in on us once in a while. I’ll try to make you proud!!’

Hoover’s uncle, Jeremy Soto, said he ‘spent his entire adult life as a Marine, serving. Doing the hard things that most of us can’t do.’

An aunt, Brittany Jones Barnett, said he was ‘a joy to be around’.

‘Always a smile. Always respectful. A joy to be around. He is adored beyond measure,’ she wrote on Facebook.

‘The world has lost a true light. Our hearts are broken. 

‘Shock, disbelief, horror, sadness, sorrow, anger and grief.’

And she paid tribute to his commitment to the cause. 

‘Thank you sweet boy for the ultimate sacrifice,’ she said. 

‘For giving your life for us all. Fighting for freedom and giving absolutely everything you had. You will never ever be forgotten. We love you so much.’ 

Chad Bianco, the sheriff of Riverside County, California, identified 22-year-old Hunter Lopez as one of U.S. Marines killed in the suicide bombing.

Lopez was the son of Captain Herman Lopez and Deputy Alicia Lopez.

‘I am unbelievably saddened and heartbroken for the Lopez family as they grieve over the loss of their American Hero,’ Bianco wrote. 

‘Before joining the Marine Corp, Hunter proudly served in our Sheriff’s Explorer Program. 

‘Our entire department is mourning this tragic loss. 

‘The Lopez family exemplifies the meaning of Service Above Self.’

According to a statement from the Riverside Sheriff’s Association, Lopez was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines.

‘Hunter, who was 22 years old at the time of his death, planned on becoming a Riverside County Sheriff’s Deputy after returning from is current deployment,’ read the statement. 

A family friend of a Rylee McCollum told DailyMail.com that ‘heads should roll’ over the disastrous U.S. exit and that the young soldier’s family is ‘absolutely broken’.

Lance Corporal Rylee McCollum, 20, was one of the 13 servicemen killed by a bomb blast in the Afghan city Thursday.

The Wyoming-born Marine’s wrestling coach and close family friend, Benjamin Arlotta, told DailyMail.com that even in diapers McCollum would stand watch on his porch with a toy rifle; first said he wanted to be a Marine aged eight; and signed up on his 18th birthday.

In a glowing eulogy to the young expectant father, whose new baby is due in three weeks, Arlotta described McCollum as a ‘personal hero’ and a ‘fantastic brother, fantastic uncle, and a wonderful friend’.

‘I was his wrestling coach since he was six. He was one of the best. A great kid, a great young man and an American patriot. He loved being a Marine,’ Arlotta said.

‘He was just a good man all around. We’re all hurting pretty bad.

‘It’s impossible. I’m sitting here with the family right now – with his dad and two sisters, his brother-in-law and niece. They’re shattered, they’re absolutely broken. The entire community is.’

Arlotta, 37, said he is furious at the Biden administration and blames the White House for putting soldiers in an unnecessarily dangerous position.

‘It’s a junk show, an absolute junk show. Not just for Rylee but for every serviceman and woman over there. They were put in a very terrible spot. In my opinion this entire circumstance has been mismanaged from every level,’ he told DailyMail.com.

‘The only thing I can hope for is that accountability isn’t forgotten. Because for the 13 men who were killed yesterday, heads need to roll for the way things have gone.

‘We’re just seeing the beginning of it. It’s not over, it’s only going to get worse. Everybody in the country needs to be praying for our servicemen and women right now. They have a scrap out in front of them.

‘Sadly those 13 Marines aren’t going to be the last ones to perish because of these terrible decisions that were made.’

Recalling fond memories of the young Jackson Hole native, the wrestling coach told a heartwarming story of McCollum’s determination.

‘When he was 13 he came into the competition season 32lbs heavier than where he wanted to be,’ Arlotta said.

‘He told me he would lose it. We made a bet. I was going to quit chewing tobacco if he could get down there. That was September, by the time the state championship rolled around in January he had made weight.

‘He entered the wrestling tournament at that weight and I quit chewing that day.

‘He was first and foremost a man of his word. If he said he would do something, by goodness gracious he stood right in front of you until he did it.’

McCollum moved to California for training. His pregnant wife Jiennah ‘Gigi’ Crayton lives in the San Diego area.

The 20-year-old lance corporal wanted to be a soldier since childhood, first telling his parents he would join the Marines age eight.

‘We were driving back from his first state wrestling tournament, I was riding with his family,’ said Arlotta. 

‘We asked him what he wanted to be when he grew up, he said he wanted to be in the Marines.

‘He enlisted on his 18th birthday,’ the coach added. 

‘When he actually enlisted his recruiter told him he could be anything, he could do any job. He swore up and down he wanted to be an infantryman.

‘If you know Rylee, you know you can’t talk him out of a damn thing, so that’s what he did.’

While still in diapers, McCollum would ‘stand guard’ with his toy rifle out on his parents’ porch, his ex-coach said. And when it came to being ready to lay down his life for his country, he said the young solder would not have flinched.

‘He was first and foremost a Marine. When it came down to doing his duty he was ready to stand up for it, absolutely,’ Arlotta told DailyMail.com.  

McCollum’s sister Cheyenne told DailyMail.com her brother had wanted to be a Marine since he was a toddler – and that his own baby is due in just three weeks.

He married Jiennah in the summer of 2020, and their first child is due in September. 

‘Rylee was an amazing man, with a passion for the Marines. He was a son, a brother, a husband and a father with a baby due in just three weeks,’ said Cheyenne. 

‘He wanted to be a Marine his whole life and carried around his rifle in his diapers and cowboy boots.

‘He was determined to be in infantry and this was his first deployment. 

‘Rylee was sent to Afghanistan when the evac began. Rylee was manning the check point when he suicide bomb went off.

‘Rylee wanted to be a history teacher and a wrestling coach when he finished serving his country. 

‘He’s a tough, kind, loving kid who made an impact on everyone he met. His joke and wit brought so much joy. To his friends and teammates and coaches, he was family.

‘Rylee will always be a hero not just for the ultimate sacrifice he made for our country but for the way he impacted every life around him for the better. 

‘Making us stronger, kinder, teaching us to love deeper. We love you Rylee,’ she said.    

Regi Stone, whose son Eli enlisted around the same time as McCollum, described him as ‘smart, strong and courageous’ and said he drew comfort when the two hung out together.

‘We always knew that Rylee had his back and my son his,’ Stone told Reuters, adding that he got to know McCollum during visits for dinner at their house. 

‘He’s a defender. He loved his country and wanted to make a difference.’ 

McCollum played football before graduating from Wyoming’s Jackson Hole High School in 2019.

‘Saying that I am grateful for Rylee’s service to our country does not begin to encapsulate the grief and sadness I feel today as a mother and as an American,’ State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jillian Balow said in a statement. 

‘My heart and prayers are with Rylee’s family, friends, and the entire Jackson community.’ 

Jared Schmitz’s father Mark rang a local Missouri radio station to pay tribute to his late son.  

‘He was not the type that liked to just sit around and get his four years done and walk away,’ Mark Schmitz told KMOX. 

‘He wanted to be in a situation where he actually made a difference.’

Schmitz said his son had been stationed in Jordan before being called to Afghanistan two weeks before the attack.

The last publicly visible post on Jared Schmitz’s Facebook page was a July 29 photograph of him at the archeological site of Petra, in Jordan. 

A friend commented that he hoped Schmitz was staying safe, to which Schmitz replied: ‘always my guy’. 

David Lee Espinoza was a 20-year-old U.S. Marine from Rio Grande, Texas.

His mother, Elizabeth Holguin, told DailyMail.com on Friday: ‘He was a very good person. He served his country. 

‘He helped in any way he could. He was there (in Afghanistan), helping innocent people.

‘This was his second deployment; he first made a trip to the Middle East and arrived in Afghanistan for about a week.  

‘I prayed every day,’ she said.

The last time they spoke was four days ago, she said.

‘I just told him to be careful, that I was worried about him and I couldn’t wait for him to come back,’ Holguin said. 

‘He told me he was fine and not to worry. He was brave. If he was scared, he didn’t show it.’

She said she holds no animosity toward the president, saying her son ‘wanted to be there.’ 

Holguin learned her son was dead when she received a phone call Friday at 2:30 a.m. 

Officials in Indiana confirmed that Corporal Humberto Sanchez was also among the dead. 

Sanchez graduated from Logansport High School in 2017. He also attended Columbia Elementary.

‘Like many, I have been heartbroken over the recent loss of the 13 U.S. service members who were murdered in the terrorist attacks against our evacuation efforts in Kabul, Afghanistan,’ Logansport Mayor Chris Martin said in a statement on Facebook. 

‘Even more heartbreaking is learning the news today that one of those killed was from right here at home in Logansport, Indiana.

‘This young man had not yet even turned 30 and still had his entire life ahead of him. Any plans he may have had for his post-military life were given in sacrifice due to the heart he exhibited in putting himself into harm’s way to safeguard the lives of others.’ 

Sanchez’s friend Kennedy Rhiannon Rickerd wrote on Facebook: ‘Humberto Sanchez throughout school you were always making everyone in the room laugh & I will remember that side of you when I think about you always, RIP.’ 

Their identities emerged on Friday as Pentagon officials revealed there was only one suicide bomber at Kabul airport on Thursday and not two, as previously claimed – adding to confusion over the attack and fears for the ongoing operation on the ground. 

Nikoui said he knew his son was dead when he saw two Marines approaching his home on Thursday at 7.15pm PST. 

David Lee Espinoza was a 20-year-old U.S. Marine from Rio Grande, Texas. He is pictured with his mother, Elizabeth Holguin, who told DailyMail.com on Friday that he was a 'good person'. She last spoke to him four days ago

David Lee Espinoza was a 20-year-old U.S. Marine from Rio Grande, Texas. He is pictured with his mother, Elizabeth Holguin, who told DailyMail.com on Friday that he was a ‘good person’. She last spoke to him four days ago 

Max Soviak, from Ohio, is seen in 2018. He graduated from Edison High School in Milan, Ohio, in 2017

Max Soviak, from Ohio, is seen in 2018. He graduated from Edison High School in Milan, Ohio, in 2017

Daegan Page (left) from Nebraska was among the 13 U.S. military servicemen who died in Thursday's attack

Daegan Page (left) from Nebraska was among the 13 U.S. military servicemen who died in Thursday’s attack

He said he sat with the two emotional Marines, who cried more than he did, and then had them leave. 

‘I was actually trying to console them. But at the same time, I just wanted them to get out as soon as possible so that no one from my family came back and saw them.

‘I thought it appropriate that I be able to tell them,’ he said.

Nikoui told Tucker Carlson on Fox News that he then realized his relatives might want to see the Marines.

He asked them if they could wait outside, while his family returned from a football game. 

‘They sat out there for four hours,’ he said. ‘I was in awe and just humbled by their performance.’

Nikoui told The Daily Beast that his son, who was based at Camp Pendleton in California, would often bring other Marines home on the holidays if they couldn’t get back to their own families.

‘My wife and I felt very honored that [since] these other boys weren’t around their homes, that we were able to provide some sort of family life for them. 

‘He really loved that [Marine Corps] family. He was devoted – he was going to make a career out of this, and he wanted to go. No hesitation for him to be called to duty,’ he said.  

Nikoui told Carlson he was angry at the ‘turkey shoot’ the Marines were working with.

‘I’m a carpenter; I’ve never served. But even I could see that that was a dangerous situation,’ he said. 

Steve Nikoui, father of Kareem Nikoui, appeared on Fox News on Friday night and fought back tears as he told of the moment the Marines came to tell him his son was dead

Steve Nikoui, father of Kareem Nikoui, appeared on Fox News on Friday night and fought back tears as he told of the moment the Marines came to tell him his son was dead

Speaking outside the four-bedroom home today, a relative told DailyMail.com that Kareem’s family were inside signing the documents required to repatriate him.

He added: ‘They’re totally devastated and they need some time. All the family are here and we’re supporting them.’

A steady stream of people have been seen coming and going from the home all day, among them some of Kareem’s colleagues from the Camp Pendleton Marine base in San Diego.

Earlier today, Kareem’s mother Shana Chappell posted angrily on social media, blaming Vice-President Kamala Harris for the loss of her son. 

Kareem’s death is also being mourned by his home city of Norco – a small community of 26,000 people nicknamed ‘Horsetown’ that sits 50 miles east of Los Angeles.

Confirming his death, the city released a message of condolence that read: ‘The City of Norco mourns the loss of Norco resident U.S. Marine Corps Lance Corporal Kareem Mae’Lee Grant Nikoui who was killed in action while stationed at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan on Thursday, August 26, 2021.

‘The U.S. Marine, who graduated from Norco High School in 2019 and served in JROTC, was committed to serving his country and is survived by his mother, father and siblings.’

The city also promised to inscribe his name on the Lest We Forget Wall at the memorial plaza that sits in a park downtown.  

Marine Cpl. Humberto Sanchez (left) of Indiana was killed in Thursday's attack

Marine Cpl. Humberto Sanchez (left) of Indiana was killed in Thursday’s attack

Sanchez's friend Kennedy Rhiannon Rickerd (pictured, with Sanchez) wrote on Facebook: 'Humberto Sanchez throughout school you were always making everyone in the room laugh & I will remember that side of you when I think about you always, RIP'

Sanchez’s friend Kennedy Rhiannon Rickerd (pictured, with Sanchez) wrote on Facebook: ‘Humberto Sanchez throughout school you were always making everyone in the room laugh & I will remember that side of you when I think about you always, RIP’

Hunter Lopez, pictured in his dress uniform, comes from a California law enforcement family, headed by his dad, Riverside County Sheriff's Captain Herman Lopez (2nd L) and his mother, Deputy Alicia Lopez (2nd R)

Hunter Lopez, pictured in his dress uniform, comes from a California law enforcement family, headed by his dad, Riverside County Sheriff’s Captain Herman Lopez (2nd L) and his mother, Deputy Alicia Lopez (2nd R)

Lopez was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines

He planned to follow his parents into the Riverside County Sheriff's Office after completing his deployment

Lopez was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines. He planned to follow his parents into the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office after completing his deployment 

Max Soviak

Lance Corporal, Kareem Nikoui

Soviak, left, was in his early 20s and was from Ohio. Kareem Nikoui (right) from California wanted to stay in the Marines his whole career, his family said on Friday 

Rylee McCollum was due to become a father. He is pictured with his pregnant wife, right, shortly before deploying to Afghanistan in April

Rylee McCollum was due to become a father. He is pictured with his pregnant wife, right, shortly before deploying to Afghanistan in April

Rylee McCollum was due to become a father. He is pictured with his pregnant wife, right, shortly before deploying to Afghanistan in April

This is the tragic final Instagram post by Max Soviak, one of the young Marines killed in the ISIS-K attack on Thursday

This is the tragic final Instagram post by Max Soviak, one of the young Marines killed in the ISIS-K attack on Thursday

There is now confusion over how the military confused one explosion with two on Thursday.  

Speaking at a briefing on Friday, Army General Hank Taylor said: ‘We do not believe there was a second explosion at or near the Baron Hotel. It was one suicide bomber.

‘We’re not sure how that report was provided incorrectly but we do know that in the confusion of very dynamic events like this, can cause information to sometimes to be misreported or garbled.’ 

General Taylor also confirmed on Friday that the U.S. is sharing the names of citizens and Afghan allies with the Taliban, but claimed it is so the Islamists ensure they can get through to the airport. 

Former President Donald Trump said on Thursday night that it equates to giving them a ‘kill list’ of enemies and where to find them. 

There is growing frustration among DC politicians – who are now calling for Biden to be impeached or resign. 

On Friday, he refused to take questions on it during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, and called it a ‘dangerous but worthy mission’. 

Vice President Kamala Harris returned to DC on Friday from Guam after shying away from the crisis since it began on August 14. 

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said on Friday the President must face a ‘day of reckoning’ for how he has handled the situation.  

‘Look, I’m extremely frustrated with this president,’ McCarthy said in a press conference.

He said a president needs to have ‘the faith, the trust, and the confidence’ of Americans – which he said Biden lost on Thursday after a devastating attack on Kabul airport, which killed at least 170 people and 13 US troops.  

‘When that day passes, we can take up anything that – to hold accountable for the actions that have been taken, the lies that have been given, the mis-decisions that put Americans in harm’s way, and the decision to leave Americans behind,’ he said.

‘That choice and that answer should never be given by the president of the United States.’ 

At the Pentagon briefing on Friday, Kirby revealed that thousands of terrorists from ISIS-K, the group responsible for the attack at the airport, escaped from Bagram prison earlier this summer after Biden’s troops cleared out from the base, leaving it to outnumbered Afghan forces to supervise them.

U.S. troops abandoned the base overnight on July 2. 

The prisoners were filmed being freed by the Taliban on August 15. 

Military experts have pinpointed the sudden, overnight withdrawal of US troops from Bagram on July 2 as the moment the U.S. gave Afghanistan away. 

In the 24 hours since Thursday, the U.S. has only evacuated 300 Americans from Kabul but up to 1,000 remain stranded. 

The government claims not everyone wants to leave, but they cannot get in touch with everyone to check.  

The flag at the White House is flying half-staff in honor of the Marines killed in Thursday's attack by ISIS

The flag at the White House is flying half-staff in honor of the Marines killed in Thursday’s attack by ISIS  

Flags at military cemeteries are also flying at half-staff. A women visits the grave of her loved one in San Diego's Miramar National Cemetery

Flags at military cemeteries are also flying at half-staff. A women visits the grave of her loved one in San Diego’s Miramar National Cemetery 

A flag flies at half staff in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on Friday in tribute to the 13 U.S. service members killed the day before

A flag flies at half staff in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on Friday in tribute to the 13 U.S. service members killed the day before

Neighbor's tie yellow ribbons to flags in front of the family home of U.S. Marines Staff Sgt. Taylor Hoover in Sandy, Utah on Friday

Neighbor’s tie yellow ribbons to flags in front of the family home of U.S. Marines Staff Sgt. Taylor Hoover in Sandy, Utah on Friday

White House Press Secretary said on Friday for the first time that the US could not 'guarantee' that every American who wants to leave Afghanistan after August 31 will be able to

White House Press Secretary said on Friday for the first time that the US could not ‘guarantee’ that every American who wants to leave Afghanistan after August 31 will be able to 

Speaking at a briefing on Friday, Army General Hank Taylor said: 'I can confirm that we do not believe there was a second explosion at or near the Baron hotel'. He and Pentagon spokesman John Kirby also revealed that the US is giving information to the Taliban of citizens and refugees

Speaking at a briefing on Friday, Army General Hank Taylor said: 'I can confirm that we do not believe there was a second explosion at or near the Baron hotel'. He and Pentagon spokesman John Kirby also revealed that the US is giving information to the Taliban of citizens and refugees

Speaking at a briefing on Friday, Army General Hank Taylor said: ‘I can confirm that we do not believe there was a second explosion at or near the Baron hotel’. He and Pentagon spokesman John Kirby also revealed that the US is giving information to the Taliban of citizens and refugees 

McCarthy also criticized Biden over his August 31 deadline for a full withdrawal – a decision that came despite pleas from fellow heads of state and lawmakers here at home.

‘Why would President Biden pick the Taliban over our allies ands over Americans?’ he questioned. 

Republican Rep. Peter Meijer also heckled Biden’s handling of the chaos in Afghanistan late Thursday night, and urged Congress to reclaim its war powers authority to prevent future crises. 

After the deadly blasts at Kabul airport Meijer posted on Twitter grieving the loss of 13 U.S. service members in the ‘horrific attack’ on Kabul airport.

He said his ‘heart is absolutely broken’ for the families of the fallen troops and their fellow troops.  

‘On Tuesday I saw Marines bravely managing chaos at Abbey Gate. 

‘Today, the grave risk they took to save countless lives was made terribly clear,’ Meijer wrote on Twitter, referencing a widely criticized trip he and Rep. Seth Moulton took to the airport amid the evacuation effort. 

‘This was a position they should not have been in, but President Biden’s reckless withdrawal gave them no other choice.

‘Congress needs to reclaim its authority over war powers to ensure such a catastrophe never happens again.’

Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby confirmed there were two blasts, tweeting on Thursday: ‘We can confirm that the explosion at the Abbey Gate was the result of a complex attack that resulted in a number of US & civilian casualties.

‘We can also confirm at least one other explosion at or near the Baron Hotel, a short distance from Abbey Gate. We will continue to update.’

It has also emerged that Biden’s administration gave a list of Afghan allies’ names to the Taliban in the naïve hope they would then help get them out. 

Trump called it a ‘kill list’ that all but guaranteed their deaths. 

The U.S. now one of the only nations still evacuating from Kabul amid increasing threats of another ISIS attack. 

Western countries have been scrambling for the last two weeks to get their people out of Afghanistan before the deadline, and their missions were hurried even more when Biden refused to extend it this week. 

A US Air Force aircraft takes off from the military airport in Kabul on Friday, as the Pentagon said the evacuation of tens of thousands of people from Afghanistan still faces more possible attacks

A US Air Force aircraft takes off from the military airport in Kabul on Friday, as the Pentagon said the evacuation of tens of thousands of people from Afghanistan still faces more possible attacks

In this satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies people are loading on an aircraft at Hamid Karzai International Airport, in Kabul, Afghanistan on Friday

In this satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies people are loading on an aircraft at Hamid Karzai International Airport, in Kabul, Afghanistan on Friday

U.S soldiers from the XVIII Airborne Corps in position guarding the at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Friday

U.S soldiers from the XVIII Airborne Corps in position guarding the at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Friday

U.S soldiers from the XVIII Airborne Corps in position guarding the at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Friday

U.S soldiers from the XVIII Airborne Corps in position guarding the at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Friday

This is the aftermath of Thursday's attack outside Kabul airport. 170 people were killed in the bomb attack and more are imminent, American generals warned

This is the aftermath of Thursday’s attack outside Kabul airport. 170 people were killed in the bomb attack and more are imminent, American generals warned 

A Taliban fighter stands guard at the site of the suicide bomb, which killed scores of people including 13 US troops, at Kabul airport

A Taliban fighter stands guard at the site of the suicide bomb, which killed scores of people including 13 US troops, at Kabul airport

Hospitals in Afghanistan are now packed with people who were injured in the blast on Thursday

Hospitals in Afghanistan are now packed with people who were injured in the blast on Thursday 

Afghans lie on beds at a hospital after they were wounded in the deadly attacks outside the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan

Afghans lie on beds at a hospital after they were wounded in the deadly attacks outside the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan

Afghans lie on beds at a hospital after they were wounded in the deadly attacks outside the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan

Afghans lie on beds at a hospital after they were wounded in the deadly attacks outside the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan

Discarded suitcases and debris outside the gate of the airport where one of the suicide bombs went off on Thursday, killing 170 people

Discarded suitcases and debris outside the gate of the airport where one of the suicide bombs went off on Thursday, killing 170 people

Clothes and blood stains of Afghan people who were waiting to be evacuated are seen at the site of the August 26 suicide bomb

Clothes and blood stains of Afghan people who were waiting to be evacuated are seen at the site of the August 26 suicide bomb

Relatives transport the coffin of one of the victims of the attack away from the airport on Friday morning

Relatives transport the coffin of one of the victims of the attack away from the airport on Friday morning

Thursday’s suicide attacks – which claimed the lives of 13 US troops and dozens of Afghans – were the final nail in the coffin for many. 

RACE TO EVACUATE FROM KABUL 

ONGOING EVACUATIONS 

US 

Russia 

Turkey 

FINISHING FRIDAY

Britain

France 

Denmark 

Spain 

Italy 

ALREADY FINISHED 

Canada

Poland

Holland

Norway

Germany

Australia 

Belgium

Sweden

Hungary 

Britain’s evacuation flights will finish on Friday, despite there being dual nationality citizens still stuck along with some allies. 

British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said on Friday: ‘It is with deep regret that not everyone has been able to be evacuated during this process. 

‘The threat is obviously going to grow the closer we get to leaving. 

‘The narrative is always going to be, as we leave, certain groups such as ISIS will want to stake a claim that they have driven out the U.S. or the U.K.’ 

Canada has also halted flights, leaving some citizens behind.

‘The government of Canada recognizes that there are a number of people in Afghanistan, including Canadian citizens, permanent residents, their families, and applicants under programs for Afghans, a government notice sent out last night, that was obtained by CBC News, said.

Gen. Wayne Eyre, Canada’s acting chief of the defense staff, said most of the Canadian personnel who were still in the country have left, but a small contingent stayed behind to support allies on the ground who have no hope of getting out. 

Biden – who crumbled under questioning on Thursday night when confronted with the airport attack death toll – refused to push back the deadline to give allied countries more time to get their people out. 

‘It is in our interest to leave on time, on target,’ Biden said on Thursday night. 

The U.S. is relying on the Taliban’s cooperation to let people through to the airport. 

U.S. officials in Kabul gave the Taliban a list of names of American citizens, green card holders and Afghan allies to grant entry into the airport’s outer perimeter.

The move was described as a gross security lapse, with one defense source telling Politico: ‘Basically, they just put all those Afghans on a kill list.’

Trump told Fox News: ‘Now we’re giving lists of Americans to the Taliban so now you just knock on the door and grab them and take them out.

‘What you are watching now is only going to get worse, it can only go one way. We look like fools all over the world. We are weak, we are pathetic, we are being led by people that have no idea what they are doing,’ he added.

Only U.S. citizens and visa holders are being removed, and in the next few days, the focus will turn to removing troops and equipment.  

Afghan refugees arriving at the Rota Air Base in Spain on Friday. The airbase is shared by American and Spanish military forces

Afghan refugees arriving at the Rota Air Base in Spain on Friday. The airbase is shared by American and Spanish military forces 

President Joe Biden crumbled on Thursday night as he took questions from reporters about the suicide bomb attacks

President Joe Biden crumbled on Thursday night as he took questions from reporters about the suicide bomb attacks 

British soldiers secure the perimeter outside the Baron Hotel, near the Abbey Gate, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, Aug. 26, 2021. The last British flights will leave today

British soldiers secure the perimeter outside the Baron Hotel, near the Abbey Gate, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, Aug. 26, 2021. The last British flights will leave today 

On Thursday, General Kenneth McKenzie, the commanding general on the ground, said he expected more bomb attacks at the airport, but that the mission would continue despite the threat.  

Biden has been widely condemned for creating the crowds at the airport that ISIS attacked by failing to get everyone out of the region before withdrawing his troops abruptly earlier this year. 

It took just 11 days for the Taliban to sweep through the country that the U.S. maintained relative stability in for 20 years. 

Thousands of men, women and children are still trying to flee the Taliban, but their hopes are fading fast as the U.S. and its allies are packing up their rescue operations ahead of the Tuesday deadline.

People are still pouring into the canal which surrounds the perimeter of the airport, standing in waters which were in Thursday filled with the blood of scores of people after a bomb tore through the crowd.

Footage from the ground revealed a scene of utter despair, with shouts and cries among the Afghans, some seen clambering up walls out of the canal and others wading through with luggage atop their heads.

In one location, dozens of Taliban members with heavy weapons about 500 yards from the airport were preventing anyone from venturing forward. 

US special forces vets launch mission to get Afghan allies out amid Biden’s chaotic withdrawal

As the U.S. fumbles to get the remaining citizens out, a group of American war veterans in Kabul are secretly saving hundreds of Afghan Special Forces troops and their families who helped them in the war but have now been left for dead as the U.S. withdraws from Afghanistan. 

The group of special op soldiers includes retired Green Berets and SEAL Team commanders who launched the mission, which they are calling Pineapple Express, after one of the Afghan commandos they served with contacted them to say he was on the run from the Taliban. His visa had not been approved when the Taliban took over on August 14 and thousands ran for the airport. 

The special ops soldiers first devised a system with U.S. troops at the airport where they sent their comrades to a gate and told them to identify themselves with the password ‘pineapple’ to be put on a plane by the Marines on the ground. Some also showed the troops pictures of pineapples on their phones. 

After successfully getting hundreds through that way, the special ops teams started going into Kabul, behind enemy lines, to rescue more of their comrades and their families in the cover of darkness.   

A group of volunteer Afghanistan veterans smuggled into Kabul this week to save hundreds of Afghan Special Forces troops and their families by getting them to the airport to be put on flights out of the city. The men made their own way into Kabul after watching the bungled evacuation from afar. The ad-hoc group have been able to get more than 600 vulnerable Afghans to the airport to be put on flights

A group of volunteer Afghanistan veterans smuggled into Kabul this week to save hundreds of Afghan Special Forces troops and their families by getting them to the airport to be put on flights out of the city. The men made their own way into Kabul after watching the bungled evacuation from afar. The ad-hoc group have been able to get more than 600 vulnerable Afghans to the airport to be put on flights

It’s unclear how long they have been in Afghanistan and how they got there but some of those involved spoke to ABC News about the mission on Friday, explaining they simply could not leave their comrades behind.  

‘I just want to get my people out,’ said one of the retired troops involved while another said the Afghan allies they were saving had a prouder sense of democracy than some Americans. 

‘He was not willing to let his father and his brother behind; even it meant he would die. He refused to leave his family. Leaving a man behind is not in our SEAL ethos. Many Afghans have a stronger vision of our democratic values than many Americans do.’ 

Retired SEAL Commander Dan O’Shea, part of Pineapple Express mission 

Their astonishingly courageous efforts have saved hundreds while Biden and his team have bungled the evacuation mission by haphazardly telling some U.S. citizens and allies to go to the airport while rejecting visas for others, and leaving some Americans to fend for themselves. 

They are one of several ad-hoc volunteer groups on the ground that are frantically trying to save people before time runs out. 

Some of the Afghans being helped by Pineapple Express were injured in Thursday’s suicide bomb attack but it’s unclear if any were killed. The U.S. has just four days to get as many as 1,000 Americans out – plus another 5,000 Afghans who helped in the war.  

General Kenneth McKenzie, who is running the U.S. operation on the ground in Kabul, warned on Thursday that another ISIS attack – specifically a car bomb similar to one used on Thursday – was imminent. 

The death toll from the attack at the airport is now 170. Thirteen US troops were killed, the first American lives lost since the evacuation carnage began on August 14.

All evacuation flights must stop by Tuesday night and the US must start putting troops and equipment on the planes soon. 

It leaves a tiny window of opportunity for thousands of people who want to flee to get out, diminishing the hope of many Afghans who have not been given special interest visas and must now make a run for the border in Pakistan or stay and live under Taliban rule.   

One of the veterans who took part in the Pineapple Express mission was a retired Green Beret known as ‘Lawrence of Afghanistan’.  

‘I have been involved in some of the most incredible missions and operations that a special forces guy could be a part of, and I have never been a part of anything more incredible than this. 

Afghan refugees are pictured on one of the flights out of Kabul after being escorted to the airport by a group of volunteer special ops veterans

Afghan refugees are pictured on one of the flights out of Kabul after being escorted to the airport by a group of volunteer special ops veterans

‘The bravery and courage and commitment of my brothers and sisters in the Pineapple community was greater than the U.S. commitment on the battlefield. I just want to get my people out,’ he told ABC News 

Retired SEAL Commander Dan O’Shea accompanied a U.S. citizen, who served as an operative, and his Afghan father and his father on foot. 

‘He was not willing to let his father and his brother behind; even it meant he would die. He refused to leave his family.

‘Leaving a man behind is not in our SEAL ethos. Many Afghans have a stronger vision of our democratic values than many Americans do.’ 

Before Thursday’s attack, another 130 were smuggled to the airport to be put on flights.

‘Dozens of high-risk individuals, families with small children, orphans, and pregnant women, were secretly moved through the streets of Kabul throughout the night and up to just seconds before ISIS detonated a bomb into the huddled mass of Afghans seeking safety and freedom,’ Army Lt. Col. Scott Mann, a retired Green Beret commander, told ABC.   

Desperate enough to risk their lives: Afghans trying to flee Kabul return to fetid canal where suicide bomber blew himself just the day before, in almost hopeless attempt to get on one of the last planes out 

Desperate Afghans trying to flee Kabul have returned to the fetid canal outside the airport where a suicide bomber blew himself up as the final hours of evacuation tick down.

Flights resumed with new urgency on Friday, a day after a double suicide bombing killed at least 103 people, including 13 U.S. service personnel. 

Thousands of men, women and children are still trying to flee the Taliban, but their hopes are fading fast as the US and its allies are packing up their rescue operations ahead of the Tuesday deadline.

British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said today that the ‘gates were closed’ and that the UK’s final evacuation flights would end within hours.

He said soldiers would try to ‘find a few people in the crowds’ but admitted that not everyone will be flown out to safety.

Wallace estimated around 1,100 Afghans eligible for evacuation would be left behind by the UK, while up to 150 Britons would not be flown home.

Washington said on Thursday that more than 100,000 people had been safely evacuated from Kabul, but that as many as 1,000 U.S. citizens are still struggling to leave.

Crowds pack into the open sewer which runs around the airport perimeter just hours after it was the scene of carnage when a suicide bomber blew himself up

The scene of carnage after a suicide bomber blew himself up on Thursday

TODAY and YESTERDAY: Crowds pack into the open sewer which runs around the airport perimeter (left) just hours after it was the scene of carnage when a suicide bomber blew himself up 

Afghans desperate to flee the country returned to the fetid canal which runs the perimeter of Kabul airport

Afghans desperate to flee the country returned to the fetid canal which runs the perimeter of Kabul airport

Afghans desperate to flee the country returned to the fetid canal which runs the perimeter of Kabul airport

Biden promised to ‘rescue the Americans, we will get our Afghan allies out, and our mission will go on.’

But as the crowd becomes more frantic as the deadline looms, so too does the risk of a further terror attack.

Wallace said: ‘The threat is obviously going to grow the closer we get to leaving. The narrative is always going to be, as we leave, certain groups such as ISIS will want to stake a claim that they have driven out the U.S. or the UK.’

Taliban fighters stand guard as they block the road to Kabul airport on Friday, a day after the deadly blasts

Taliban fighters stand guard as they block the road to Kabul airport on Friday, a day after the deadly blasts

In one location, dozens of Taliban members with heavy weapons about 500 yards from the airport were preventing anyone from venturing forward. 

Crowds of people gathered at Kabul’s Emergency Hospital to collect the bodies of loved ones after the bombings outside the airport. 

A boy sobbed in the back of a car, squeezed beside the coffin of a relative killed in the devastating blasts that quickly overwhelmed the city’s hospitals. 

Bowing his reddened face between his crossed arms and wiping away tears with his scarf, the youngster stared down at the plywood box, wrapped shut with a white sheet.

Another Afghan, Abdul Majeed, came to the clinic to look for his brother, an 11th-grade student who was at the airport with no documents or papers, desperate to escape the ‘troubles’ of his home country.

‘He wanted to fly abroad,’ Majeed told AFP.

‘Unfortunately, he’s missing after the back-to-back blasts.’ 

Majeed said overnight he saw hundreds of people, dead and alive, brought to the hospital, a major trauma clinic.

‘I saw every one with my own eyes. My brother was not among them,’ he said.

‘Since yesterday, I have searched all the hospitals in Kabul but I have failed to find him.’

Majeed said his younger brother was a talented student, but ‘such an atmosphere has been developed in Afghanistan that everyone wants to go abroad, and that’s because of the troubles here.’

Others also came on foot, exhausted after a sleepless night, to sit in groups on the pavement outside the walls of the medical centre, waiting for news from within.

One man emerged from the gates clutching his mobile phone, showing a picture to those gathered outside of a loved one receiving treatment.

The bomb victim is lying in a bed, his eyes closed and face bandaged.

In a tweet on Friday, the hospital said the ‘situation is still quite critical’.

‘Our three operating theatres in the hospital have been working all night long – the last surgery was at 4am.’

‘We have people in intensive care, in sub-intensive care.’ 

The bombings on Thursday marked the deadliest day for U.S. forces in Afghanistan since August 2011. 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk