The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Our military’s sacrifice was not in vain

- Follow Marc A. Thiessen on Twitter, @marcthiess­en.

In December 2001, when I worked in the Pentagon, I traveled with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to a country neighborin­g Afghanista­n, where we met an incredible group of Americans — the U.S. Special Operations forces who had just days earlier led the battle to liberate Mazar-e Sharif and set in motion the Taliban's fall from power.

In a tent at a secret air base, they told us their story how they had connected with anti-Taliban forces, who taught them to ride special horses trained to run into machine gunfire. Many of the soldiers had never been on a horse before, but they soon found themselves riding through some of the most terrifying terrain in the world in darkness, along narrow mountain trails so steep that, one soldier told us, “it took me a week to ease the deathgrip on my horse.”

When they reached their target, a team of U.S. forward air controller­s slipped into the city and hid behind enemy lines >> ready to “paint” their targets for the U.S. bombers flying in the skies above. They told the Afghans that when the bombs started falling on the enemy, that was the sign to charge. Suddenly, bombs began to land. “The explosions were deafening, and the timing so precise that, as the soldiers described it, hundreds of Afghan horsemen literally came riding out of the smoke, coming down on the enemy in clouds of dust and flying shrapnel,” Rumsfeld later recounted in a speech at the National Defense University (disclosure: I was his chief speechwrit­er).

The U.S. military launched the first war of the 21st century with a cavalry charge — and drove the Taliban and al-Qaida from the sanctuary where the terrorists planned the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Recently, the last U.S. forces departed Afghanista­n, after President Joe Biden handed the country back to the Taliban regime those courageous Americans had deposed two decades earlier. In the wake of Biden's surrender — and, yes, that is the right word — many veterans of the Afghan war are asking whether their sacrifice was in vain.

It was not. And the proof is there for all to see: For 20 years, we have not suffered another catastroph­ic terrorist attack on the U.S. homeland. Their service and sacrifice helped purchase two decades of safety and security for the American people. Many Americans take that safety and security for granted, as if the terrorists had simply lost interest in attacking us. But the terrorists didn't lose interest; they were stopped by the selfless courage of a generation of Americans who volunteere­d to fight our enemies halfway across the world so we did not have to face them at home.

In so doing, they also bettered the lives of millions of Afghans >> particular­ly women and girls. But their mission in Afghanista­n was not to turn it into a Western democracy. It was to ensure that Afghanista­n had a government whose leaders did not wake up every morning thinking the United States must be destroyed, or provide sanctuary for terrorists determined to deliver that destructio­n to American cities and streets.

That mission was succeeding. When Biden took office, U.S. forces in Afghanista­n were not nation-building, policing the country, or even fighting a war. They were training, equipping and enabling Afghan forces to fight our enemies for us. In January 2015, we transferre­d the combat mission to the Afghan security forces. U.S. troops were providing their Afghan allies with intelligen­ce, mission planning and air cover — and with that support, the Taliban were unable to make significan­t military gains. As former U.S. ambassador to Afghanista­n Ryan Crocker told me, even with just 2,500 U.S. troops on the ground, the Taliban was unable to take back a single regional capital — until that last modicum of support was withdrawn.

We had fewer troops in Afghanista­n than we have stationed in Spain. But that small contingent of U.S. forces, together with some 7,000 NATO forces, was preventing the Taliban from overthrowi­ng a flawed but pro-U.S. government, and turning the country into a terrorist sanctuary again.

Our soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines didn't fail. Their leaders did. The new administra­tion can try to shift blame to the agreement negotiated by its predecesso­r all it wants, but it was Biden who made the decision to carry out an unconditio­nal withdrawal and hand Afghanista­n back to the Taliban. But as former Obama defense secretary Leon Panetta recently explained, that won't be the end of the story in Afghanista­n.

“We're going to have to go back in to get ISIS. We're probably going to go have to go back in when al-Qaida resurrects itself, as they will, with this Taliban,” Panetta said. “The bottom line is, we can leave a battlefiel­d, but we can't leave the war on terrorism.”

When we do send them back, as we inevitably will, they will salute and carry out the mission once again >> just like they did in Mazare Sharif two decades ago.

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