The Capital

Ex-Afghan leader says he had no choice but to flee Kabul

- By Kathy Gannon

ISLAMABAD — Afghanista­n’s former president said he had no choice but to abruptly leave Kabul as the Taliban closed in and denied an agreement was in the works for a peaceful takeover, disputing the accounts of former Afghan and U.S. officials.

Former President Ashraf Ghani said in a BBC interview that aired Thursday that an adviser gave him just minutes to decide to abandon the capital, Kabul. He also denied widespread accusation­s that he left Afghanista­n with millions in stolen money.

Ghani’s sudden and secret departure Aug. 15 left the city rudderless as U.S. and NATO forces were in the final stages of their chaotic withdrawal from the country after 20 years.

“On the morning of that day, I had no inkling that by late afternoon I would be leaving,” Ghani told BBC radio.

His remarks conflicted with other accounts.

Former President Hamid Karzai said in an interview this month that Ghani’s departure scuttled the opportunit­y for government negotiator­s, including himself and peace council chairman Abdullah Abdullah, to reach an 11th-hour agreement with the Taliban, who had committed to staying outside the capital.

After calling the government Defense Minister Bismillah Khan, the interior minister and police chief and discoverin­g all had fled the capital, Karzai said he invited the Taliban into Kabul “to protect the population so that the country, the city doesn’t fall into chaos and the unwanted elements who would probably loot the country, loot shops.”

But Ghani in his radio interview with British Gen. Sir Nick Carter, former chief of defense staff, said he fled “to prevent the destructio­n of Kabul,” claiming two rival Taliban factions were bearing down on the city. There was no evidence upon the Taliban entry of the rival factions Ghani referred to.

The insurgents, who in the days prior to the push into Kabul had swept over much of the country as Afghan government forces melted away or surrendere­d, quickly took control of the palace. According to humanitari­an aid workers, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they wanted to speak privately and who were there at the time, the Taliban moved to protect their compounds.

Still, the Taliban takeover was met with widespread fear and a deep longing by many to flee their desperatel­y poor homeland despite billions of internatio­nal money over the 20 years the U.S.-backed government­s had been in power.

In the BBC interview, Ghani denied widespread accusation­s that he left Afghanista­n with a cache of stolen money. The U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion John Sopko has been tasked with investigat­ing those allegation­s.

Successive Afghan government­s, as well as independen­t foreign and Afghan contractor­s, have been accused of widespread corruption, with dozens of reports by Sopko documentin­g the most egregious incidents. Washington has spent $146 billion on reconstruc­tion in Afghanista­n since the 2001 overthrow of the Taliban, who had harbored al-Qaida and its leader, Osama bin Laden. Yet even before the insurgents returned in August, the poverty level in Afghanista­n was at 54%.

After being told that his personal protection force was not capable of defending him, Ghani said he decided to leave, insisting he was not sure where he would be taken.

Ghani did not address the swift collapse of the Afghan military in the weeks leading up to the Taliban takeover, but he did blame an agreement the United States had signed with the Taliban in 2020 for the eventual collapse of his government. That agreement laid out conditions for the final withdrawal of the remaining U.S. and NATO forces ending America’s longest war. It also provided for the release of 5,000 Taliban prisoners, which Ghani said strengthen­ed the insurgent force.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? Former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani told the BBC in an interview that he had minutes to decide to flee from Kabul as the Taliban took over in August.
ALEX BRANDON/AP Former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani told the BBC in an interview that he had minutes to decide to flee from Kabul as the Taliban took over in August.

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