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Op-Ed: Our withdrawal from Afghanistan signals to the world that the U.S. can’t be relied upon

Taliban behind a desk in the Afghan presidential palace.
Taliban fighters take control of the Afghan presidential palace after President Ashraf Ghani fled the country on Sunday in Kabul, Afghanistan.
(Zabi Karimi / Associated Press)
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When Joe Biden came into office, we were told that the “adults are back in charge” because he immediately set to work undoing as much of Donald Trump’s legacy as he could. “The new president in his first week issued more than three dozen executive actions on a wide range of issues,” reported U.S. News & World Report. “And virtually all of them reverse or stop actions taken by Donald Trump.” From immigration to healthcare, the adults set about cleaning up the mess left for them.

To that end, he rejoined the Paris climate accord and set to work on restoring the Iran deal.

But, on Afghanistan, the president’s hands were tied. On Saturday, and again on Monday, he insisted that he “inherited” Trump’s deal and his hands were tied. But, wanting it both ways, he also said he agreed with the policy that was forced on him.

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It’s true, Trump’s disastrous deal with the Taliban would have had us withdraw by May 1, but because Biden was such a grownup, he extended the deadline to Sept. 11 — the 20-year anniversary of the attack that set this war in motion. In messaging terms, it was singularly the most idiotic date he could pick. But he justified the extension to ensure that “We will not conduct a hasty rush to the exit. We’ll do it — we’ll do it responsibly, deliberately and safely.”

On Sunday, CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken what to make of the fact that the spectacle in Afghanistan didn’t look particularly responsible, deliberate or safe. Blinken’s response: “Look. I think it shows that we were prepared. The president was prepared for every contingency as this moved forward.”

But Blinken also admitted, “the fact of the matter is, we’ve seen that that force has been unable to defend the country, and that has happened more quickly than we anticipated.” On Monday, Biden confirmed he was taken by surprise by the rapidity of the Afghan government’s collapse, but said it was all because the Afghans were “unwilling” to fight. He made the obligatory “the buck stops with me” nod, but also insisted the calamity was the fault of the Afghan army, which was trained and organized to depend on U.S. support.

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“In the wake of President Biden’s withdrawal decision,” the Wall Street Journal reports, “the U.S. pulled its air support, intelligence and contractors servicing Afghanistan’s planes and helicopters. That meant the Afghan military simply couldn’t operate anymore.”

One would think adults would have understood this and planned accordingly — or at all. The collapse of the Afghan government wasn’t inevitable until we made it inevitable.

When I say “we,” I mean the entirety of the U.S. government and the foreign policy establishment. The military should have understood that immediately cutting off support would cripple the Afghan military. And, knowing this, someone should have threatened to resign as a way to forestall this calamity.

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This was Biden’s decision and he deserves all of the scorn he gets for it, but that doesn’t change the fact that the Trump administration made this choice an easy one for him. If Trump had his druthers, we would have left even earlier, and the Taliban’s takeover would be just as assured (Trump himself congratulated Biden’s “wonderful” decision to withdraw). It may not have happened as quickly — but the strategic goal was the same: abandon the Afghans, the same way he abandoned the Kurds.

Perhaps what is most infuriating about this debacle is how its defenders, on the left and right, cling to the idea that they are the sober realists. We should only go to war when it is in our narrow, vital, self-interest they thunder, forgetting we invaded Afghanistan in the first place for precisely such reasons, with the most bipartisan support for use of force since we declared war on Japan.

The Biden administration justified our withdrawal on the grounds that we need to switch to more serious geopolitical rivalries, as with China. Maybe we do. But doing so didn’t require pulling a few thousand troops and contractors from Afghanistan. More importantly, does anyone truly believe that this self-inflicted blow to our national honor will improve our standing in the world? The signal sent to Taiwan — and China — is that we can’t be counted on.

That message, heard around the world, is an unforced strategic blunder. It’s also a moral one.

Biden made “America is back” the unofficial slogan of his presidency. Imagine how that phrase sounds to the Afghans swarming the Kabul airport. Or how it would have sounded to the poor souls who clung to the outside of a transport plane before they plummeted to their deaths? Or how hollow it sounds to the millions of Afghan girls facing forced marriages to Taliban fighters?

If this is how adults behave, let’s give some children a shot.

President Biden addressed the American people about the messy U.S. pullout from Afghanistan. He stood by his decision and said there was no good time to leave.

Aug. 16, 2021

@JonahDispatch

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