The Capital

Afghan drawdown weighs on Biden

Despite recent wins, chaotic end to war is key turning point

- By Aamer Madhani

WASHINGTON — The 12 months since the chaotic end to the U.S. war in Afghanista­n haven’t been easy for Joe Biden.

The new president was flying high early in the summer of 2021, the American electorate largely approving of Biden’s performanc­e and giving him high marks for his handling of the economy and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But come August, the messy U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanista­n seemed to mark the start of things going sideways for him.

It was a disquietin­g bookend to the 20-year American war: the U.S.-backed Afghan government collapsed, a grisly bombing killed 13 U.S. troops and 170 others, and thousands of desperate Afghans descended on Kabul’s airport in search of a way out before the final U.S. cargo planes departed over the Hindu Kush.

The disastrous drawdown was, at the time, the biggest crisis that the relatively new administra­tion had faced. It left sharp questions about Biden and his team’s competence and experience — the twin pillars central to his campaign for the White House.

As the one-year anniversar­y of the end of the Afghan war nears, the episode — a turning point in Biden’s presidency — continues to resonate as he struggles to shake dismal polling numbers and lift American confidence in his administra­tion ahead of November’s critical midterm elections.

“It was a pivotal moment that he hasn’t ever really recovered from,” said Christophe­r Borick, director of the Institute of Public Opinion at Muhlenberg College in Pennsylvan­ia. “Things were going really well in terms of how voters viewed him in terms of bringing stability to the economy and how the government addressed the pandemic, issues that are higher priorities to the American electorate than the war in Afghanista­n. But Afghanista­n cracked that image of competency, and he hasn’t ever really been able to repair it.”

The Afghanista­n debacle was just the start of a series of crises for Biden.

As Biden was still dealing with fallout from the Afghan withdrawal last summer, COVID-19 cases began spiking again. Layered over that in coming were months were strains on the economy caused by inflation, labor shortages and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The sum of it left Americans weary.

In the weeks before Afghanista­n went sideways, Biden’s approval rating stood at 59% in a July 2021 poll by Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. An AP-NORC poll conducted last month put his rating at 36%.

White House officials and Biden allies hope the president is now at another turning point — this one in his favor.

The administra­tion has recently racked up high-profile wins on Capitol Hill, including passage of the $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act designed to boost the U.S. semiconduc­tor industry. Congress also passed a program to treat veterans who may have been exposed to toxic burn pits on U.S. military bases.

And over the weekend the White House sealed the deal on far-reaching legislatio­n addressing health care and climate change that also raises taxes on high earners and large corporatio­ns, a package the administra­tion says will also help mitigate the impact of high inflation.

The legislativ­e victories followed Biden ordering the CIA drone strike in Kabul that killed al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri, who along with Osama bin Laden mastermind­ed the 9/11 attacks. Biden says the operation validates the decision to withdraw from Afghanista­n.

“I made the decision to end America’s longest war ... and that we’d be able to protect America and root out terrorism in Afghanista­n or anywhere in the world,” Biden told a Democratic

National Committee virtual rally last week. “And that’s exactly what we did.”

Biden had other big legislativ­e wins after the Afghanista­n debacle. In November, he signed into law a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture deal to fund rebuilding of roads, bridges and other big projects In April, the Senate confirmed Biden’s history-making U.S. Supreme Court nominee, Ketanji Jackson Brown, who became the first Black woman to serve on the high court. And in June, Congress passed the most significan­t changes to gun laws in nearly 30 years.

But those legislativ­e accomplish­ments weren’t rewarded with a boost in his standing with voters.

Eric Schultz, a senior adviser to former President Barack Obama, argues that there’s reason for the White House to hope that momentum is shifting.

“The question is, ‘What did Democrats deliver when they swept into power in 2020?’ ” Schultz said. “And I think for Democrats running in November, we have an even better answer to that question than we did just a few weeks ago.”

Schultz added that the operation that killed al-Zawahri also offered strong evidence that Biden’s instincts as commander in chief were correct.

“Nobody thought Afghanista­n was going to be a panacea of rainbows and unicorns after we left,” Schultz said. “But the president made the right decision that based on U.S. national security interests we could execute our counterter­rorism imperative­s without having thousands of troops on the ground.”

William Howell, a political scientist and director of the Center for Effective Government at the University of Chicago, said the biggest drag on Biden’s standing with Americans has been runaway inflation and an unrelentin­g pandemic.

But the Afghanista­n debacle became a defining moment in the Biden presidency, he said, marking when the American electorate began questionin­g Biden’s ability to fulfill his campaign promise to usher in an era of greater empathy and collaborat­ion with allies.

“Afghanista­n remains significan­t going forward as he tries to make that central 2020 argument of competency,” Howell said. “The images of Afghanista­n are going to remain Exhibit A in the other side’s rebuttal of the competency claim.”

The administra­tion, for its part, has pushed back that lost in the criticism of the U.S. withdrawal effort is that in the war’s final days, the United States pulled off the largest airlift in American history, evacuating some 130,000 U.S. citizens, citizens of allied countries and Afghans who worked with the United States.

Biden continues to face criticism from immigrant refugee advocates that the administra­tion has fallen short in resettling Afghans who assisted the U.S. war effort.

As of July, over 74,000 Afghan applicants remained in the pipeline for special visas that help military interprete­rs and others who worked on government-funded contracts move to the United States and pave the way for them to receive a green card.

 ?? SHEKIB RAHMANI/AP ?? Hundreds of people gather near a U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane on Aug. 16, 2021, in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
SHEKIB RAHMANI/AP Hundreds of people gather near a U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane on Aug. 16, 2021, in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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