New York Post

Tale of Two ‘Airlifts’: A’stan vs. Berlin

- MICHAEL BARONE

‘THIS is now on track,” said White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Tuesday, “to be the largest airlift in US history.” On the process of bringing American citizens, Afghan partners and allies out, she continued, “I would not say that is anything but a success.” Psaki was careful not to use the word “all” in identifyin­g the categories of people being evacuated from Taliban-controlled Afghanista­n. But, perhaps due to a Generation Xer’s insufficie­nt grounding in history, she was unwise in using the word “airlift.”

The word brings to mind the Berlin airlift of 1948-49, which was quite a different enterprise from what we are witnessing today. The Kabul airlift is an operation removing Americans and allies from a country we are, by President Biden’s order, abandoning. As Psaki’s non-use of “all” suggests, it is unlikely to be comparty pletely successful.

The Berlin airlift was the opposite. It was a US effort to avoid abandoning West Berlin at the behest of Josef Stalin’s Soviet Union. And it was triumphant­ly successful.

One thing both airlifts have in common is that they were the products of the personal decisions of American presidents made against much expert advice. Biden says he was bound, in this one case, to carry out a decision of his predecesso­r, former President Donald Trump. Despite indication­s that the very limited troop deployment in Afghanista­n was sustainabl­e, he ordered it ended within a short deadline.

Former President Harry Truman’s decision was made in almost the opposite circumstan­ces. In June 1948, the Soviet Union cut off all motor, rail and barge traffic from the US and British occupation zones to West Berlin, which was landlocked deep in the Soviet zone. The city’s 2.5 million people had only 36 days’ supply of food and 45 days’ supply of coal. Allied troops were vastly outnumbere­d by Red Army units. The Berlin blockade looked impossible to break.

Truman’s top military and diplomatic advisers, men of great ability, doubted that Berlin could be supplied solely by air. But Truman ended a key meeting in July 1948 by starkly declaring, “We’re not leaving Berlin.”

Air Force Gen. William Tunner, who supervised the Burma-toChina “hump” airlift during World War II, organized logistics until airplanes landed at Berlin’s Tempelhof airport every 30 seconds and were unloaded within 30 minutes. Berlin was supplied with food and coal over the winter, and in May 1949, the Soviets called off the blockade.

I’ve long argued that Truman’s steadfast support of the Berlin airlift was one reason he, at age 64, won the 1948 election after trailing for months in the polls, and led his to an unanticipa­ted downthe-line victory. And it’s beginning to look like Biden’s role in this very different airlift may have something of the opposite effect in the 2022 midterm elections, and also in 2024 if Biden seeks a second term at age 82.

The Berlin airlift, together with Truman’s steadfast resistance to Soviet advances in Europe, appeared to supply a sense of order in what had been a dangerousl­y disorderly postwar world.

The Kabul evacuation, and its apparent failure to leave no one behind, is only one instance of how events seem to be spinning out of control. That’s apparent also at the southern border, with the most illegal border crossings in 21 years in one major city after another; with homicides rising more than in any year since 1960; with supposedly “transitory” inflation wiping out wage increases.

Meanwhile, polls suggest minimal appeal for the Biden Democrats’ proposals to vastly increase federal spending, including reinstitut­ing the old welfare-withoutwor­k-requiremen­ts that were renounced back in the (Bill) Clinton years.

Biden’s job approval has plunged into Trump territory — under 50 percent. The generic congressio­nal vote, which usually tilts Democratic, is now tied. And the leftwing pollster Civiqs shows negative Biden job approval in Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin — states with key 2022 Senate races.

So just as Truman’s airlift blocking totalitari­an advance strengthen­ed the president and his party in 1948, Biden’s airlift accommodat­ing totalitari­an advance is, at least temporaril­y, weakening the president and his party in 2021.

‘ Truman ended a key meeting in July 1948 by starkly declaring, “We’re not leaving Berlin.”’

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