Daily Mail

We must go back into Afghanista­n, say two ex-defence ministers

Calls for action as Taliban ramps up Helmand attacks

- By Mark Nicol and David Williams

TWO former defence ministers have called on British forces to return to the frontline in Afghanista­n to stop the Taliban taking over.

Ex-Commando Johnny Mercer and Tobias Ellwood, chairman of the Commons defence committee, are leading calls for the UK to reverse its decision to abandon the country.

The withdrawal, which came after President Joe Biden’s decision to bring US troops home, is already having dramatic consequenc­es for the region.

In the weeks since the last British troops pulled out, the Taliban has made huge territoria­l and strategic gains, putting the lives of former British interprete­rs in even greater jeopardy.

Many live in Helmand’s capital Lashkar Gah – which was on the verge of falling to the Taliban last night – and face almost certain death should they be identified.

The Daily Mail’s award-winning Betrayal of the Brave campaign has highlighte­d the plight of extranslat­ors at risk of Taliban revenge attacks.

And yesterday Labour claimed that around two-thirds of the Afghans who supported British forces could still be under threat.

It came as Mr Mercer warned that, although the US has lost its ‘moral compass’ and ‘left Afghanista­n to its fate’, that doesn’t mean Britain should do the same.

‘We have aircraft all over the Middle East. We should be dropping bombs and killing Taliban,’ he said. ‘No call for air support from Afghan troops on the ground should go unanswered.’

The Tory MP, who served three tours of Afghanista­n, added: ‘A lot of British blood was spilled in Helmand Province. The sacrifices of our troops are being squandered. Was it all really for nothing? Are we really so tied to the Americans that we cannot do anything ourselves or with other Nato partners?’

Mr Ellwood also called on the Government to ‘step up’ and ‘show internatio­nal leadership’. ‘The accelerate­d withdrawal of Western troops from Afghanista­n while the Taliban is rampant is the biggest foreign affairs own goal of this century,’ he said.

‘Britain must step up and show internatio­nal leadership, convene a conference of like-minded states and get a plan in place to deliver effective military support. If we don’t, everything we fought for since 2001 could be lost.’

Speaking of August 31, when all US and Nato troops are expected to be out of Afghanista­n, he added: ‘This order must be revoked. The UK must not be timid.

‘We are capable of acting without the Americans and it’s time to prove it.’

From 2001, more than 450 British troops sacrificed their lives in Afghanista­n and more than 2,000 suffered serious injuries. The vast majority were killed in Helmand, where the Taliban have seized nine of out ten districts in its capital, Lashkar Gah.

It is one of three provincial capitals under siege by the Taliban.

■ The Taliban commander overseeing an assault on the capital of Helmand was released from prison at the US’s request, it was reported last night.

Mawlavi Talib was one of 5,000 prisoners released last year in a bid to reach a peace deal between the Taliban and the Afghan government.

However, Talib is now leading the Taliban offensive in the city of Lashkar Gah – with at least 50 civilians feared dead in the most recent fighting.

 ??  ?? Ruin: A security guard at the site of a car bomb explosion in Kabul yesterday
Ruin: A security guard at the site of a car bomb explosion in Kabul yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom