Mercury (Hobart)

Son of Chopper spared from jail

- ANNIE McCANN

THE son of late infamous criminal Chopper Read has avoided jail after he committed a string of driving offences and stole a 10-pack of Jim Beam from a bottle shop.

Charles Vincent Read, known as Charlie Read (pictured), appeared before magistrate Chris Webster in Hobart on Wednesday.

The 22-year-old had pleaded guilty to four counts of driving a motor vehicle while a prescribed illicit drug was present in oral fluid and one count each of driving under the influence of intoxicati­ng liquor, driving while exceeding the prescribed alcohol limit, being a driver involved in a crash and failing to stop, stealing and littering, among other charges.

The driving offences occurred between December 2019 and July this year, including driving with THC in his system on two occasions and methylamph­etamine on another.

The court heard Read had been driving a black Holden towards Sorell on Penna Rd one night in April when he crashed into a woman’s car and drove away from the scene.

Police later went to Sorell to see Read get out of the car smelling strongly of liquor and slurring his words.

Read’s barrister, Caroline Graves, said the “notorious” crimes of the concreter’s father may have given him a “higher than usual vulnerabil­ity to procrimina­l associates and antisocial behaviour” but he had reflected on his crimes.

Mr Webster sentenced Read to six months in jail, wholly suspended for three years, disqualifi­ed him from driving and ordered him to pay victims of crime levies.

US President Joe Biden has made a forceful defence of his “wise” decision to leave Afghanista­n, telling Americans he refuses to send another generation to fight in the “forever war”.

The traumatic departure from Afghanista­n, completed after 20 years of war against the Taliban, was “a wise decision and the best decision for America”, Mr Biden said in an address to the nation.

After coming under fire from Republican opponents over the chaotic nature of the exit, Mr Biden said he did what should have been done years ago.

“I was not going to extend this forever war and I was not

extending a forever exit,” he said, calling the evacuation an “extraordin­ary success”.

Speaking on national television from the ornate State Dining Room at the White House, Mr Biden thumped the lectern as he detailed the extraordin­ary costs of a war – including more than 2400 US military deaths and up to $US2.3 trillion spent – that ended back where it started, with the Taliban in power.

“I take responsibi­lity for the decision,” he said. “I made a commitment to the American people that I would end this war. Today, I honoured that commitment.

“After 20 years in Afghanista­n, I refused to send another

generation of America’s sons and daughters to fight a war.”

Following two weeks of evacuation flights – a titanic effort marred by a suicide bombing attack that killed 13 US service members and scores of Afghans – Mr Biden faces stern criticism that could yet hurt him domestical­ly.

Getting out of the last big post-9/11 war was one of his campaign promises coming into office, and the idea was overwhelmi­ngly popular.

But the US departure, culminatin­g with a solitary plane lifting off at midnight from Kabul with the last troops on board, brought home for many that the so-called “drawdown” really amounted

to jarring and humiliatin­g defeat.

Republican­s, led by Mr Biden’s bitter predecesso­r Donald Trump, have painted the exit as a humiliatin­g failure, a defeat that outdoes even the 1975 evacuation from Saigon, and a signal to the world that the US has given up.

“President Biden just said his disastrous withdrawal from Afghanista­n was an ‘extraordin­ary success’,” the Republican Party said in a Twitter statement.

“Thirteen service members were killed. Hundreds of Americans were left abandoned. Billions of dollars in US military equipment is in

the hands of the Taliban.”

Mr Biden insisted in his speech that remaining Americans in Afghanista­n – many of them dual nationals – would be allowed by the Taliban to get out if they wanted.

Addressing another rising concern, he warned ISIS-K – the Islamic State terror group responsibl­e for the Kabul airport bomb attacks – that they would be hunted down.

And he reached out to those who now oppose American attempts at nation building in hostile countries, saying the Afghanista­n withdrawal marked “the end of an era of major military operations to remake other countries”.

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 ?? ?? A Taliban fighter in an Afghan Air Force plane in Kabul and, inset, an Afghan Air Force fighter and Taliban inside an abandoned plane. Pictures; AFP
A Taliban fighter in an Afghan Air Force plane in Kabul and, inset, an Afghan Air Force fighter and Taliban inside an abandoned plane. Pictures; AFP

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