Bristol Post

‘Taliban takeover surprised us all’

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THE head of the armed forces has admitted “everybody got it wrong” over the pace of the Taliban takeover of Afghanista­n, but denied there was a failure in military intelligen­ce.

General Sir Nick Carter said many assessment­s suggested Kabul would fall this year, despite Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab having said intelligen­ce put this as “unlikely”.

Boris Johnson and his Foreign Secretary have been coming under sustained criticism for their handling of the crisis, with thousands of vulnerable Afghans feared to have been left behind.

Mr Raab, who was holidaying in Crete in August while the Taliban marched back to power, said the central assessment of the military and wider intelligen­ce community was that it was “unlikely Kabul would fall this year”.

However, Sir Nick, Chief of the Defence Staff, denied to the BBC on Sunday that the military intelligen­ce was wrong.

“No. The first scenario I think also would’ve said is it was entirely possible that the Government wouldn’t hold on that much longer,” he told The Andrew Marr

Show. “Indeed, many of the assessment­s suggested it wouldn’t last the course of the year and, of course, that’s proven to be correct.”

Sir Nick said “there’s been a lot of talk about a failure of intelligen­ce” but that he said back in July that “there are a number of scenarios that could play out and one of them certainly would be a collapse and state fracture”.

“I think everybody got it wrong,” he said. “It was the pace of it that surprised us and I don’t think we realised quite what the Taliban were up to. They weren’t really fighting for the cities they eventually captured, they were negotiatin­g for them, and I think you’ll find a lot of money changed hands as they managed to buy off those who might have fought for them.”

Sir Nick said even the Taliban did not expect to take back power of Afghanista­n so swiftly as the US pulled out its troops ahead of the August 31 deadline.

“At the moment they suffer from what we military call catastroph­ic success. They were not expecting to be in government as quickly as they have appeared and the reality is they are trying to find their feet,” he said.

“We need to wait and see how this happens and recognise that they’re probably going to need a bit of help in order to run a modern state effectivel­y and if they behave perhaps they will get some help.”

Under questionin­g from MPs this week, Mr Raab suggested the intelligen­ce was wrong on how quickly the Taliban would take Kabul, which fell on August 15.

He told an emergency session of the Foreign Affairs Committee that the “central assessment” from the Joint Intelligen­ce Committee and the military was a “steady deteriorat­ion” after troops withdrew in August and “it was unlikely Kabul would fall this year”.

 ??  ?? Chief of the Defence Staff General Sir Nick Carter
Chief of the Defence Staff General Sir Nick Carter

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