New York Daily News

CALAMITY PLANE

Joe defends ‘plan’ that led to Kabul chaos and Afghans plunging to death from sky

- BY TIM BALK

President Biden defended the U.S. evacuation from Afghanista­n on Monday after the Taliban completed a stunning takeover of Kabul, passing the blame onto the country’s overrun military and saying the exit was always destined to prove painful.

Facing intense criticism enflamed by a deadly scene of desperate Afghans attempting to flee at Kabul’s internatio­nal airport, Biden said “there was never a good time to withdraw” but that staying wasn’t worth future losses in American blood and treasure.

“I stand squarely behind my decision,” the president said in a defiant 18-minute address from the East Room of the White House. “If anything, the developmen­ts of the past week reinforced that ending U.S. military involvemen­t in Afghanista­n now was the right decision.”

He acknowledg­ed the Taliban’s siege of the country escalated more quickly than he expected after America wound down its two-decade campaign in South Asia.

But he said Afghanista­n’s leadership “gave up” and that U.S. soldiers should not be fighting in a conflict the “Afghan forces are not willing to fight for themselves.”

Biden said the U.S. will continue to support the Afghan people, push for regional diplomacy and speak out for the rights of Afghans.

Many disagreed with Biden’s decision, angered by the chaos the world witnessed over the weekend as the Taliban ultimately captured Kabul, the capital, and Afghanista­n’s President Ashraf Ghani left the country.

The U.S. Embassy has been evacuated and the American flag lowered, with diplomats relocating to the airport to help with the chaotic evacuation. Other Western countries also closed their missions and were flying out staff and their citizens.

Leon Panetta, who served as President Barack Obama’s defense secretary, compared the situation to America’s failed Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961 under President John F. Kennedy.

“It unfolded quickly, and the president thought that everything would be fine, and that was not the case,” Panetta told CNN. “But President Kennedy took responsibi­lity for what took place. And I strongly recommend to President Biden that he take responsibi­lity, admit the mistakes that were made.”

Biden said he’d rather take the criticism over the fallout than pass the decision of how and when to withdraw to a fifth U.S. president. The decision to leave Afghanista­n is “the right one for America,” he said, because keeping a U.S. presence there was no longer a U.S. national security interest.

He described the images coming out of Afghanista­n — especially at the airport in Kabul, where Afghans descended in hopes of fleeing the country — as “gut-wrenching.” Video of Afghans clinging to an Air Force plane and running alongside it as prepared to take off circulated widely on the internet.

Senior U.S. military officials said the chaos at the airport in Kabul left seven people dead Monday, including some who fell from a departing American military transport jet. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss ongoing operations.

Late Monday, hundreds of people remained trapped between American forces trying to push them out of the airport and Taliban forces trying to keep them in, witnesses said.

The ease with which the Taliban overtook the nation threatened to erase 20

years of Western-led efforts to remake Afghanista­n that saw tens of thousands of Afghans and more than 3,500 U.S. and allied troops killed. The initial invasion in October 2001 drove the Taliban from power and scattered Al Qaeda, which had planned the 9/11 attacks while being protected in Afghanista­n.

Under the Taliban, which ruled in accordance with a harsh interpreta­tion of Islamic law, women were largely confined to their homes and suspected criminals faced mutilation or public execution. The insurgents have sought to project greater moderation in recent years, but most Afghans remain skeptical.

On Monday, Nillan, a 27-year-old resident of Kabul who asked to be identified only by her first name for fear of reprisals, said she did not see a single woman out on the streets during a 15-minute drive, “only men and boys.”

Unsurprisi­ngly, former President Donald Trump pounced on Biden, though he once pushed for an even quicker troop withdrawal timeline than the current course. Trump, who unsuccessf­ully invited Taliban leaders to Camp David in 2019, sealed a deal with the insurgent faction via phone in March 2020 — a striking moment for a sitting U.S. president.

“The outcome in Afghanista­n, including the withdrawal, would have been totally different if the Trump administra­tion had been in charge,” Trump said in a Monday statement that underscore­d the possible political peril facing Biden. “It’s not that we left Afghanista­n,” he said. “It’s the grossly incompeten­t way we left!”

Obama and Trump wanted to leave the region but ultimately stood down in the face of resistance from military leaders and other political concerns. Biden, on the other hand, has been steadfast in his refusal to change the Aug. 31 deadline, in part because of his belief the American public is on his side.

A late July ABC News/Ipsos poll, for instance, showed 55% of Americans approving of Biden’s handling of the troop withdrawal.

Most Republican­s have not pushed Biden to keep troops in Afghanista­n over the long term and they also supported Trump’s own push to exit the country. Still, some in the GOP stepped up their criticisms of Biden’s withdrawal strategy and said images from Sunday of American helicopter­s circling the U.S. Embassy in Kabul evoked the humiliatin­g departure of U.S. personnel from Saigon in 1975.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell deemed the scenes of withdrawal as “the embarrassm­ent of a superpower laid low.”

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 ??  ?? After horrendous scenes were beamed around globe of Afghans mobbing runway at Kabul airport Monday, with some clinging to military plane as it took off and falling to their death in a desperate bid to flee the Taliban, President Biden (above) said, “I stand squarely behind my decision.”
After horrendous scenes were beamed around globe of Afghans mobbing runway at Kabul airport Monday, with some clinging to military plane as it took off and falling to their death in a desperate bid to flee the Taliban, President Biden (above) said, “I stand squarely behind my decision.”
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 ??  ?? Afghans desperate to escape the Taliban takeover climbed atop Air Force transport plane at Kabul airport Monday, and others hopped on (inset top) as it took off, falling to their deaths. President Biden (l.) said U.S. could do nothing more for a nation that is “not willing to fight.”
Afghans desperate to escape the Taliban takeover climbed atop Air Force transport plane at Kabul airport Monday, and others hopped on (inset top) as it took off, falling to their deaths. President Biden (l.) said U.S. could do nothing more for a nation that is “not willing to fight.”
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