Joe Biden betrays another US ally as he leaves Afghanistan to be conquered by the Taliban
As four more key cities fell to the surging Taliban today, the withdrawing United States was coming to terms with another stain on its conscience.
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In early October of 2019, Donald Trump made one of the more morally repugnant decisions of his presidency.
Blindsiding the world with an announcement on Twitter, he ordered a sudden withdrawal of what few US military forces remained near Syria’s northern border.
“It is time for us to get out of these ridiculous endless wars, many of them tribal, and bring our soldiers home. We will fight where it is to our benefit,” Mr Trump said at the time.
“Turkey, Europe, Syria, Iran, Iraq, Russia and the Kurds will now have to figure the situation out.”
It was a staggering betrayal of America’s allies, the Kurds, whose help had been invaluable in the fight to crush ISIS.
RELATED: ‘They abandoned us’: Kurds accuse US of betraying them
The US funded, trained and armed Kurdish units throughout the war with ISIS, and in return they did the bulk of the fighting, suffering more than 12,000 casualties in the process.
Mr Trump rewarded that sacrifice by abandoning them, clearing the way for neighbouring Turkey to invade northern Syria and attack them.
“If Turkey does anything that I, in my great and unmatched wisdom, consider to be off limits, I will totally destroy and obliterate the economy of Turkey,” Mr Trump warned.
It was a hollow threat.
Within days, more than 100,000 people had been displaced from their homes, and the Kurds had already been subjected to war crimes and executions.
“They abandoned us,” said the Kurdish commander, General Mazloum Ebdi. The US withdrawal was labelled a “stab in the back”.
The words of the retreating American soldiers were just as haunting.
“They trusted us, and we broke that trust. It’s a stain on the American conscience,” said one Army officer.
Why am I bringing this up? Because now Joe Biden is doing the same thing, abandoning America’s allies in Afghanistan to be conquered and oppressed by the Taliban.
On Friday the Taliban captured four more provincial capitals, adding to its seizure of Afghanistan’s second and third largest cities, Kandahar and Herat, the day before. It now controls more than two-thirds of the country.
Soon the militants will have encircled the national capital, Kabul.
So, 20 years after the Taliban was swept from power, the return of its evil regime now seems inevitable. Untold human rights abuses will follow.
In fact they’ve already started. Captured Afghan soldiers are being executed, civilians are being attacked, and women are being forced into marriage.
Taliban rule will mean ethnic cleansing, the death penalty for homosexuality, the end of education for women, and many more indignities for the Afghan people. All the progress of the last two decades will be undone.
“Afghanistan is in the throes of yet another chaotic and desperate chapter, an incredible tragedy for its long-suffering people,” United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres said today.
“Afghanistan is spinning out of control.”
He said it was “particularly horrifying and heartbreaking” to see reports of Afghan women having their hard-won rights “ripped away from them”.
Mr Biden has chosen this outcome. It didn’t need to happen. He has decided Afghanistan’s return to the dark ages is an acceptable price for ending America’s longest war.
So far, the politician who campaigned on “restoring the soul of America” hasn’t even had the decency to express regret for what’s unfolding.
“I do not regret my decision,” the President said on Tuesday.
“We spent over $US1 trillion over 20 years. We trained and equipped with modern equipment over 300,000 Afghan forces. We lost thousands to death and injury, thousands of American personnel. They’ve got to fight for themselves, fight for their nation.”
If Trump were presiding over the debacle in Afghanistan, the press and foreign policy elites would be decrying his irresponsible and disastrous handling. A tough but fair point from the great â¦@gideonrachmanâ©: https://t.co/oDS8xGNCcY
— Susan Glasser (@sbg1) August 13, 2021
What makes the Afghanistan situation so frustrating is that the US & its allies had reached something of an equilibrium at a low sustainable cost. It wasnât peace or military victory, but it was infinitely preferable to the strategic & human catastrophe that is unfolding.
— Richard N. Haass (@RichardHaass) August 13, 2021
In real time weâre watching the U.S. lose a war, because it is choosing to lose. Weâre throwing away success in the primary mission (protecting America, denying jihadists safe havens) because of failures so far in the secondary mission (nation-building): https://t.co/FihGku1kLK
— David French (@DavidAFrench) August 12, 2021
This is an incredible tweet.
— Stephen Hayes (@stephenfhayes) August 12, 2021
Hearing additional reports? Are they credible? If not, don't tweet this. If so, of course they're war crimes.
But the repositioning of the US government as a passive actor in Afghanistan is breathtaking. And a national embarrassment. https://t.co/JRbf7SHsIX
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was no more sympathetic.
“They have what they need. What they need to determine is whether they have the political will to fight back,” she told reporters.
The only somewhat senior Biden administration official to display any real empathy has been Molly Montgomery, a deputy assistant secretary at the State Department.
“Woke up with a heavy heart, thinking about all the Afghan women and girls I worked with during my time in Kabul,” Ms Montgomery wrote on Twitter today.
“They were the beneficiaries of many of the gains we made, and now they stand to lose everything. We empowered them to lead, and now we are powerless to protect them.”
Tellingly, she deleted the tweet shortly afterwards.
RELATED: Map shows the Taliban’s rapid advance
Mr Biden knows he is unlikely to pay any immediate political price for the withdrawal.
Polls consistently show more than two-thirds of Americans support leaving Afghanistan, and you can understand why. Continuing the war indefinitely, at a significant financial and human cost, is not an appealing proposition.
But would staying have been better than the alternative, which is now happening at sickening speed before our eyes?
Will Americans still support the withdrawal five years from now, if the Taliban once again turns Afghanistan into a haven for terrorists to plot attacks on the West?
Will they even support it five months from now, when the Taliban has taken Kabul and dealt the US a humiliating defeat?
We all remember what happened after Barack Obama withdrew from Iraq: the power vacuum allowed the Islamic State to rise, and the US was forced to deploy forces to the region again. That could happen in Afghanistan as well.
But even if those nightmare scenarios don’t come to pass, Mr Biden has already left another dark stain on his nation’s conscience.
The US, which so often claims to speak from the moral high ground, has hung another ally out to dry. And it will do lasting harm to the country’s reputation.
“With America’s allies left in the lurch, prospective partners will think twice before offering up their support in future conflicts,” the military historian Frederick Kagan wrote this week.
“They know that this is not how a global leader acts. And most important, so do we.”
Sam is news.com.au’s US correspondent | @SamClench
Originally published as Joe Biden betrays another US ally as he leaves Afghanistan to be conquered by the Taliban