Resolution criteria
Resolves YES if by 23:59 Afghanistan Time (UTC+4:30) on August 31, 2026, the U.S. Department of Defense or U.S. Central Command publicly announces that U.S. forces have assumed operational control of Bagram Airfield (a.k.a. Bagram Air Base/BAF, ICAO: OAIX), or two or more reputable outlets (e.g., Reuters, AP) report that the U.S. has taken control and is operating the base under U.S. command. Verification sources:
https://www.defense.gov/Newsroom/
,https://www.centcom.mil/MEDIA/NEWS-ARTICLES/
,https://www.reuters.com/
,https://apnews.com/
.“Assumed operational control” means the U.S. holds primary authority over base security and airfield operations. Exclusions: brief raids, transits, or joint activities where Afghan/Taliban authorities retain primary control; statements of intent or negotiations without control on the ground.
Name changes don’t matter; control of the physical installation at Bagram (OAIX) is what counts. If unmet by the deadline, resolves NO.
Background
Bagram, once the largest U.S. base in Afghanistan, was vacated during the 2021 U.S. withdrawal and has been under Taliban control since August 2021. (en.wikipedia.org)
On September 18–19, 2025, President Donald Trump said the U.S. is seeking to regain control of Bagram; Afghan/Taliban officials publicly rejected the idea. No formal U.S. plan has been announced as of this writing. (reuters.com)
Considerations
Any “reclaiming” would likely require an agreement with—or coercion against—the Taliban authorities that currently hold the base, complicating verification absent explicit DoD/CENTCOM statements. (en.wikipedia.org)
If control is “joint,” the market resolves YES only if U.S. command has primary authority over base security and airfield operations (as evidenced by official releases or consistent major-media reporting).