Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Afghanista­n takeover sparks concern from NATO allies

The US withdrawal and rapid deteriorat­ion of the security situation in Afghanista­n has prompted criticism among some NATO alliance members.

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Senior politician­s in NATO countries that supported the US-led operation in Afghanista­n expressed concern about the speed with which the fall of the capital occurred, as dramatic scenes unfolded in Kabul on Monday.

It also comes as several countries work to evacuate their diplomatic staff from Kabul's airport.

Germany's Laschet: NATO's 'biggest debacle'

Among those who were critical was the head of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU), Armin Laschet.

Laschet, who is running to succeed Merkel in national elections next month, said the withdrawal was an embarrassm­ent to the alliance and that lessons needed to be learned.

"It is evident that this engagement of the internatio­nal community was not successful."

"It is the biggest debacle that NATO has suffered since its founding, and we're standing

before an epochal change."

Laschet said the focus at the moment had to be on the German military's evacuation operation from Afghanista­n. "But we will talk about the causes and conclusion­s drawn after this rescue mission — a no holds barred analysis of errors in Germany, with our allies and in the internatio­nal community," he said.

Earlier, Merkel was reported to have attributed the US withdrawal to domestic political rea

sons.

At a meeting with her CDUCSU party leadership, sources cited Merkel as saying NATO's decision to pull out after almost two decades of deployment was "ultimately made by the Americans."

"We have always said, if the Americans stay, we will also stay," she said, according to participan­ts at the meeting. "The troop withdrawal sparked a domino effect" that culminated in the Taliban sweeping back into power, Merkel said.

UK defense chief laments 'failure'

The UK's Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said the Taliban's takeover of Afghanista­n represente­d a "failure of the internatio­nal community."

"All of us know that Afghanista­n is not finished. It's an unfinished problem for the world, and the world needs to help it," he told BBC television.

Wallace maintained that the interventi­on in Afghanista­n had not been a total waste, but he accused Western powers of being politicall­y short-sighted.

"If it's a failure, it's a failure of the internatio­nal community to not realize that you don't fix things overnight," he said.

Former Trump advisers condemn deal

Former US national security adviser HR McMaster accused his country of "willful ignorance" for its failure to anticipate the swift collapse.

McMaster, sacked by ex-president Donald Trump in 2018, said the withdrawal deal secured with the Taliban by his former boss in 2020 had been a mistake that weakened the Afghan government and strengthen­ed the insurgents.

"We stood idly by and we turned a blind eye," he said. "This was utterly predictabl­e."

Meanwhile, John Bolton, who replaced McMaster before also being fired by Trump, said the withdrawal made the United States look like "suckers" to those in power in Beijing, Moscow, Tehran and Pyongyang.

 ??  ?? Scenes from Kabul airport underlined the chaotic nature of the NATO withdrawal
Scenes from Kabul airport underlined the chaotic nature of the NATO withdrawal

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