Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Blinken regards Afghan exit as U.S. refocusing

China, climate and pandemic listed as urgent agenda items

- TONY CZUCZKA BLOOMBERG NEWS (TNS) Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Joe Light of Bloomberg News (TNS).

WASHINGTON — Withdrawin­g U.S. troops from Afghanista­n meshes with the Biden administra­tion’s goal of focusing resources on China and the covid-19 pandemic, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said, as another top U.S. official said it was time for the Afghan people to “step up.”

“The terrorism threat has moved to other places,” Blinken said on ABC’s

“This Week” on Sunday.

“And we have other very important items on our agenda, including the relationsh­ip with China, including dealing with everything from climate change to covid. And that’s where we have to focus our energy and resources.”

President Joe Biden said Wednesday that U.S. forces would fully withdraw from Afghanista­n by the 20th anniversar­y of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, saying it’s time to end America’s “forever war.”

Blinken, who met with Afghan leaders in Kabul and NATO allies in Brussels last week, said al-Qaeda, which carried out the attacks two decades ago, “has been significan­tly degraded.”

He played down concern that U.S. intelligen­ce might be blind to terrorist threats emerging in Afghanista­n, saying the U.S. will be reposition­ing forces and assets to “guard against the potential reemergenc­e.”

“We’ll be able to see that in real time with time to take action,” Blinken said. “We have different capabiliti­es, different assets, and I think a greater ability to see something coming with time to do something about it.”

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said in a CNN interview that the U.S. withdrawal would eliminate an “excuse” for the Taliban to keep fighting, and that “the ball clearly is in the court of Taliban and their supporters.”

Yet he expressed caution about the Taliban’s readiness to agree to a political settlement, saying “what I hope they will go for and what they’re likely to go for are likely to be different things.”

The U.S. is committed to helping find a peace deal for Afghanista­n that includes the Taliban, Blinken said.

Separately, U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan said there are no guarantees about what will happen in Afghanista­n.

“All the United States could do is provide the Afghan security forces, the Afghan government and the Afghan people resources and capabiliti­es, training and equipping their forces, providing assistance to their government,” Sullivan said on “Fox News Sunday.” “We have done that, and now it is time for American troops to come home and the Afghan people to step up to defend their own country.”

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