Santa Fe New Mexican

With Afghan pullout, Biden resets U.S. agenda

President expected to announce complete withdrawal by Sept. 11

- By Anne Gearan

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden has watched a parade of presidents set sweeping goals for the United States overseas, only to become entangled in long-running, slow-bleeding problems. Now that he has the job himself, Biden is determined to avoid the same fate.

His pledge to end the two-decade U.S. war in Afghanista­n is the best example so far.

Biden sees the war against the Taliban as a drag on the need to deal with bigger threats like China, climate change, the coronaviru­s pandemic — and even a terrorism menace that has mutated significan­tly in the two decades since the attacks that launched the Afghan war to begin with. He is also focused on threats from Russia and the decline of U.S. influence abroad.

Biden will lay out plans Wednesday to withdraw all U.S. forces from Afghanista­n by Sept. 11, the 20th anniversar­y of the al-Qaida attacks on the United States that were planned from Afghan soil. The announceme­nt makes good on Biden’s campaign promise to close down the nation’s longest war and is in keeping with his view that wars become self-perpetuati­ng if the generals call the shots.

“The president has been consistent in his view that there’s not a military solution to Afghanista­n, that we have been there for far too long,” White

House press secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday, adding that “he also believes we need to focus our resources on fighting the threats we face today, 20 years — almost 20 years — after the war began.”

Biden in coming days and weeks is starkly signaling his belief that the United States needs to shift its focus to other parts of the globe, especially Asia.

The announceme­nt Wednesday comes two days before Biden hosts Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, the first foreign leader to visit the Biden White House, for a session expected to focus heavily on threats from China.

It also comes as U.S. climate envoy John Kerry is expected to soon become the first top Biden administra­tion official to visit China, and a day after Biden had invited Russian President Vladimir Putin for a future summit. Biden has also invited both Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping to attend a U.S.-sponsored climate summit later this month.

Those efforts are challenge enough without the weight of legacy conflicts that have bogged down presidents for decades, Biden foreign policy advisers said.

Three presidents tried and failed to dig out of the war in Afghanista­n, and Biden was vice president when one of them, Barack Obama, ended up significan­tly expanding it instead. Biden had opposed the Pentagon’s plan to begin adding forces in 2009, the first year of the Obama-Biden administra­tion, and maintained his suspicion as the war swelled.

Now Biden has the chance to act on his long-held views, and he is taking it less than three months into his administra­tion.

“The president deeply believes that in contending with the threats and challenges of 2021 — as opposed to those of 2001 — we need to be focusing our energy, our resources, our personnel, the time of our foreign policy and national security leadership on those threats and challenges that are most acute for the United States,” a senior Biden administra­tion official said Tuesday.

“Doing that requires us to close the book on a 20-year conflict in Afghanista­n and move forward with clear eyes and an effective strategy to protect and defend America’s national security interests,” the official added.

The official spoke on the condition of anonymity under rules set by the White House.

The same theory applies to Biden’s effort to downgrade the Middle East as a central priority, with the exception of a focus on Iran’s nuclear program. He has distanced himself from both the Israeli and Saudi leaders and made no moves to launch peace talks between Israel and the Palestinia­ns — a contrast with many of his predecesso­rs who took office determined to be the president who brings peace to the Middle East.

Biden, unlike most recent presidents, came to the White House with decades of experience watching other presidents succeed and fail, and he has made it clear he is trying to learn the lessons of their experience­s.

Before serving as vice president, when he handled an array of foreign policy challenges for Obama, Biden chaired the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, giving him an extended window into the way presidents try to shape the U.S. role in the world.

Most of Biden’s priorities are hard pivots away from the policies and whims of former president Donald Trump, from bolstering the U.S. connection to the European Union and NATO to sharply criticizin­g Putin. Restarting talks with Iran last week is another example.

But in the case of Afghanista­n, Biden is pursuing a goal he actually shares with Trump: ending the U.S. military presence in Afghanista­n by a date certain. Although Trump failed to withdraw all forces on his watch, he set a May 1 deadline that Biden is now leveraging, extending the deadline by only a few months.

Biden usually likes to take the high road in comparison­s with Trump, whom he dismissed at one point as “the former guy.” His announceme­nt Wednesday is likely to include a whiff of one-upmanship, as the Democratic foreign policy experts say he is pulling off what the Republican iconoclast failed to do.

Still, Democrats acknowledg­e privately that Trump started the process that Biden is now finishing.

Biden also seeks to vindicate a long-held view that the U.S. military in Afghanista­n was often fighting the wrong enemy — the domestic Afghan Taliban insurgents — rather than the foreign-born terrorists the operation originally targeted, according to people who have discussed the war with Biden.

The president has also said U.S. forces unintentio­nally became part of the problem, and he argued that the solution was not to add more troops.

The drawdown will begin this month, ahead of Trump’s May 1 deadline, and continue through the summer months, U.S. officials said Tuesday. The key difference from Trump will be coordinati­on with NATO allies and other partners and a plan for an orderly withdrawal, U.S. officials said.

The Sept. 11 date is firm and leaves no room for a small counterter­rorism force once envisioned as a hedge against a resurgence of al-Qaida or similar threats, the senior Biden administra­tion official said.

Biden had been considerin­g that option as recently as February. But he concluded that every time the United States makes its moves in Afghanista­n dependent on conditions on the ground, those conditions result in staying engaged.

“This is not conditions-based. The president has judged that a conditions-based approach, which has been the approach of the past two decades, is a recipe for staying in Afghanista­n forever,” the official said.

Some Republican­s, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch

McConnell, R-Ky., accused Biden of selling out the elected Afghan government or endangerin­g U.S. security interests by pulling out before circumstan­ces warranted.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., called the withdrawal plan “a disaster in the making.”

Although Graham was a strong Trump ally, he opposed Trump’s plan to pull out of Afghanista­n entirely. Graham supports leaving a small counterter­rorism force behind.

“A full withdrawal from Afghanista­n is dumber than dirt and devilishly dangerous,” Graham said in a statement. “President Biden will have, in essence, canceled an insurance policy against another 9/11.”

Biden’s approach won support from a range of other quarters, however, including some Republican­s like Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and some veterans groups.

“Words cannot adequately express how huge this is for troops and military families who have weathered deployment after deployment, with no end in sight, for the better part of two decades,” VoteVets Chairman Jon Soltz said in a statement tweeted by the group.

“The Endless War cheerleade­rs have been saying for 15 years that if we just stay in Afghanista­n a little longer, the Taliban will give up and the Afghan government will get their act together. And they will say it for the next 15 years if we leave our troops there indefinite­ly,” Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., tweeted Tuesday.

And Anthony Cordesman, a security analyst at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, wrote Tuesday that a U.S. withdrawal would have “major strategic benefits” at relatively low risk.

“It will be a tragedy, but the time has come for the strategic equivalent of a mercy killing,” Cordesman wrote.

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