Muscat Daily

War against Taliban in Afghanista­n a strategic failure: EX-US military official

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The USled war against the Taliban in Afghanista­n, launched after the September 11, 2001 terror attacks, was a ‘strategic failure’, a senior military officer said on Tuesday.

“At the end of 20 years, we, the military helped build an army, a state where we could not forge a nation, the enemy occupied Kabul, the overthrow of the government occurred in the military we supported for two decades faded away.

“That is a strategic failure,” former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman retired General Mark Milley said during his testimony at the

House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing.

Former commander of US Central Command retired General Kenneth Mckenzie also testified about the 2021 US withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

Milley said the US military provided hope for 20 years to the Afghan people and ‘unpreceden­ted opportunit­y’ to millions.

“In the final days, we gave 130,000 people their lives and freedom at very high cost and most importantl­y, we protected the United States from terrorist attack from Afghanista­n, which was our original mission,” he added.

In 2021, US President Joe Biden announced full US troop withdrawal from Afghanista­n by September 11, the 20-year anniversar­y of the 9/11 attacks that triggered the conflict.

“I’ve concluded it’s time to end America’s longest war,” Biden said, adding: “It’s time for American troops to come home.”

Turning to the 13 fallen American soldiers and approximat­ely 170 Afghan civilians at the Abbey Gate outside Kabul’s Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport on August 26, 2021, Milley said he is before the Congress ‘voluntaril­y’ to help the families of the fallen.

“The 13 fallen at Abbey Gate, and the thousands of fallen and tens of thousands of wounded - and countless other members who suffer the invisible wounds of war - to help them get answers,” he added.

Milley said the withdrawal lays at the feet of US State Department and White House, rather than the military.

On August 14, the non-combatant evacuation operation (NEO) decision was made by the Department of State and the US military ‘alerted, marshalled, mobilised and rapidly deployed faster than any military in the world could ever do.”

“It is my assessment that that decision came too late,” he added.

Milley told the Congress that he was ‘not in favour of a unilateral withdrawal of US forces because of my assessment of the associated costs and risks’.

“The fundamenta­l tension facing the president, in fact two presidents, was that no one could satisfacto­rily explain when or even if those conditions would ever be met. “And if we stayed indefinite­ly, an open war would likely begin with the Taliban again, with increased risk of additional casualties,” he said.

 ?? ?? US former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman retired General Mark Milley
US former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman retired General Mark Milley

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