San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Congress set to grill Pentagon leaders on Afghanista­n pullout

- By Mark Satter

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley are gearing up for a grilling this week, as the Pentagon leaders prepare to testify before Congress.

Representa­tives and senators are planning to question them about last month’s bloody exit from Afghanista­n and a new book that says Milley called China to calm tensions surroundin­g the 2020 election.

Republican­s and many Democrats have criticized President Joe Biden for his handling of the Afghanista­n withdrawal, while the parties have split on Milley’s reported call to China, in which Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Robert Costa wrote that Milley told Chinese Gen. Li Zuocheng that the United States did not intend to attack.

A number of Republican­s, including Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, have said they believe Milley’s calls were “treasonous” if the book is accurate. Rubio has called on him to resign. But Biden responded that he remains confident in the general, who has also told reporters his calls went according to protocol.

U.S. Central Commander Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, who oversaw U.S. forces in Afghanista­n, will join them when they appear before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday and the House Armed Services Committee Wednesday.

In a Sept. 23 letter to Austin, Oklahoma’s James M. Inhofe,

the ranking Republican on the Senate panel, requested a long list of records, intelligen­ce reports and summaries of Pentagon documents relating to Afghanista­n, the rushed withdrawal of which last month left behind U.S. citizens and Afghan allies and exposed U.S. service members and Afghans to a terrorist bombing that killed 13 Americans and scores of Afghans.

Inhofe wants an accounting of how many people the military evacuated from the country and of all military equipment left behind. He set an Oct. 8 deadline for the informatio­n.

On Sept. 22, five Republican senators on the committee, Josh Hawley of Missouri, Tom Cotton of Arkansas, Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, Rick Scott of Florida and Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, wrote to the chairman, Democrat Jack Reed of Rhode Island, to ask him to allow them extra time to question the Pentagon witnesses.

“The American people want to know how the Administra­tion — including the Department of Defense — failed to prepare for the collapse of the Afghan forces

and allowed itself to be blindsided by the Taliban’s final advance,” they wrote, referencin­g the quick takeover of the country, as Islamist militants overran a U.S.-backed government.

Republican­s have sought to balance how much they criticize the U.S. military, however, as compared to Biden. Inhofe, for one, has cast blame mainly at Biden, accusing him of ignoring the Pentagon’s concerns about a quick withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

“Let’s make one thing clear now,” he tweeted on Sept. 23. “What happened in Afghanista­n over the past few months was not a failure of our military — It was a failure of our commander-inchief.”

While the questionin­g from Republican­s will surely be more caustic, Democrats will also have pointed queries for Austin and Milley about Afghanista­n.

The House version of the fiscal 2022 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act contained bipartisan provisions requesting an explanatio­n for the botched withdrawal, indicating that both parties are displeased with how the administra­tion handled it.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, left, and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley will testify this week on the country’s withdrawal from Afghanista­n.
Tribune News Service Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, left, and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley will testify this week on the country’s withdrawal from Afghanista­n.
 ?? New York Times file photo ??
New York Times file photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States