Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The fight over identity

- Ben Shapiro Ben Shapiro is a columnist for Creators Syndicate.

In November 2009, the late Charles Krauthamme­r gave a seminal speech, titled “Decline Is a Choice.” In it, Krauthamme­r stated, “The question of whether America is in decline cannot be answered yes or no. There is no yes or no. ... Nothing is inevitable. Nothing is written. For America today, decline is not a condition. Decline is a choice.”

This week, President Joe Biden chose decline.

That choice was not inevitable. It was foolhardy in the extreme, a symptom of Biden’s commitment to his own idiotic ideology — an ideology that crashed headlong into the steel wall of reality in Afghanista­n.

Former Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump both wanted to remove the United States from Afghanista­n, but both recognized the reality on the ground: that removing all American support from the Afghan military would result in the Taliban — the terrorist regime responsibl­e for providing aid and support to Osama Bin Laden and al-Qaida in the run-up to and aftermath of 9/ 11 — taking over the country.

Biden knew this. He just didn’t care. As he reportedly expressed in 2010, while speaking with Richard Holbrooke about American responsibi­lity in Afghanista­n, “[ Expletive] that, we don’t have to worry about that. We did it in Vietnam; Nixon and Kissinger got away with it.”

And so, Biden destroyed the stalemate in Afghanista­n that had allowed America’s counterter­ror mission in-country to continue successful­ly. The Afghan military was built to work with U.S. close air support; Biden withdrew that support.

In fact, he went so far as to bar American contractor­s from entering the country to help the Afghan air force maintain its equipment. He cut the Afghan military off at the knees, then blamed them when they left the battlefiel­d.

And Biden lied. He lied that Afghanista­n represente­d an “endless war” carrying the possibilit­y of “endless rows of headstones at Arlington National Cemetery”; in reality, the United States ended its combat operations in Afghanista­n in 2014, had just 2,500 troops on the ground before Biden’s unplanned pullout, and has not suffered a combat casualty since February 2020. Biden suggested that his hands were tied by a tentative agreement between the Trump administra­tion and the Taliban, though he has had no problem abrogating Trump’s agreements, and despite the fact that the Taliban had obviously failed to fulfill any of the contingenc­ies under the Trump agreement. And he lied that the Afghan military’s collapse simply reflected a lack of willpower: The Afghan military incurred 55,000 deaths since 2015, compared with nearly none from NATO.

Why did Biden do all of this?

Because American strength is not Biden’s priority. He wants America’s footprint on the world stage minimized; he wants America focused as much as possible on building a Nordic-style social welfare state accompanie­d by racial ly inflammato­ry equity programmin­g at home.

The result of Biden’s withdrawal from Afghanista­n will be a reconstitu­ted terror threat as our enemies recognize we are a paper tiger; renewed Chinese aggression against Taiwan and diplomatic overtures toward the Taliban; and new offensives from Russia and Iran.

Foreign policy abhors a vacuum. Biden has willfully created one. What’s more, in abandoning an ally of two decades, Biden has sent a clear message: Those who rely on American support can no longer do so securely. They’d be better off making realpoliti­k connection­s with America’s enemies in order to hedge their bets.

Meanwhile, Biden presses forward toward American hospice care. With the economy under inflationa­ry pressure, he continues to foster trillions in spending, extraordin­ary new entitlemen­t programs and a complete rethinking of the relationsh­ip between individual­s and the government.

If there is a Biden doctrine, it’s simply this: surrender abroad, bloated dotage at home. Decline is a choice. And Biden has made that choice.

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