The Oklahoman

Biden, et al’s gaseous obfuscatio­n on Afghanista­n isn’t helping a bit

- George Will Columnist George Will is a columnist for the Washington Post Writers Group. His email address is georgewill@washpost.com.

WASHINGTON — Pentagon spokesman John Kirby, a retired rear admiral, recently said that during the long U.S. undertakin­g in Afghanista­n “the goals did migrate over time.” Did the goals themselves have agency — minds of their own? Why do so many people, particular­ly in government, engage in such gaseous talk? Because it envelops in abstract, obfuscatin­g vocabulari­es things that are awkward to defend. And because we are decades into the “leakage of reality” from American life.

President Joe Biden says the Taliban is “going through sort of an existentia­l crisis about do they want to be recognized by the internatio­nal community as being a legitimate government.” Which is worse, if he means this, or if he doesn’t? The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, says “we expect the Taliban to respect women’s rights” and “to be respectful of humanitari­an law.” No sentient person expects anything of the sort.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken proclaims three musts: “Afghans and internatio­nal citizens” who wish to leave Afghanista­n “must” be allowed to. Roads, airports and border crossings “must remain open.” “Calm must be maintained.”

“Must,” lest nice people frown? State Department spokesman Ned Price is pleased that the U.N. Security Council has asked the Taliban to create a government that is “united, inclusive, and representa­tive, including with the full and meaningful participat­ion of women.” If this were even remotely possible, why were 20 years and $2 trillion devoted to resisting the Taliban?

Nonsense from high officials is nothing new. Cyrus Vance, President Jimmy Carter’s secretary of state, once said that the Soviet dictator Leonid Brezhnev “shares our dreams and aspiration­s.” But why does it seem that, now more than ever, government officials who have nothing sensible to say insist on proving this?

In an era of instant, inexpensiv­e and high-velocity disseminat­ion of anyone’s words, there is a Gresham’s law of rhetoric: Bad drives out good. Hence the plague of pompous garrulousn­ess — of officials insulting the public’s intelligen­ce with bromides no one believes.

Today’s stunning leakage is of prestige from government. Biden has exhorted congressio­nal progressiv­es, who needed no encouragem­ent, to force the most comprehens­ive peacetime expansion of government in U.S. history. The grandiosit­y has two dimensions. One is government’s siphoning away of a hitherto unimaginab­le portion of society’s current and future fiscal resources. The other is a radical revision of the nation’s civic vocabulary by postulatin­g, as in Oregon, that disparitie­s in social outcomes are prima facie evidence of the nation’s endemic viciousnes­s.

Suddenly the Afghanista­n tragedy has become a powerful accelerant of the U.S. government’s prestige leakage, punctuatin­g seven months of government aggrandize­ment.

Clement Attlee, Britain’s prime minister from 1945 to 1951, once told Harold Laski, chairman of Attlee’s Labour Party, that “a period of silence on your part would be welcome.” Biden should say that to some of his subordinat­es, and some of them would serve him by saying it to him.

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