Scottish Daily Mail

GENERALS OPEN FIRE ON RAAB

He faces fresh call to quit for being ‘asleep on watch’ as crisis erupted

- By Daniel Martin and Mark Nicol

‘They will kill me on the spot’

FORMER Army generals last night accused ministers of being ‘asleep on watch’ and warned they would have ‘blood on their hands’ if the Taliban kill any interprete­r abandoned by Britain.

It came as Dominic Raab faced more pressure to quit last night over claims hundreds of vulnerable Afghans who helped the British may have been needlessly left behind.

Major General Charlie Herbert, who served in Afghanista­n, said that the Foreign Secretary should consider his position.

It emerged yesterday that Mr Raab had not spoken to his Afghan or Pakistani counterpar­ts once in the six months before the fall of Kabul.

One minister said that if the Foreign Secretary had come back earlier from his holiday in Crete this month, it may have been possible to save another 1,000 Afghans eligible for rescue.

Major General Herbert, who has campaigned on behalf of translator­s and other vulnerable Afghans, said: ‘The lack of informatio­n being provided to those eligible personnel abandoned in Afghanista­n is utterly disgracefu­l.

‘If Dominic Raab is not up to the task in hand he must stand down now and let someone else deal with this crisis.’ He added: ‘If any abanone doned interprete­r or local staff member is killed at the hands of the Taliban, their blood will be on the hands of the Prime Minister and his Foreign, Defence and Home Secretarie­s.’

Major General Herbert said that Defence Secretary Ben Wallace had ‘utterly betrayed those of us who served alongside our interprete­rs, and our hearts are broken’.

He spoke out after learning how Afghans who worked for the British Council in Kabul have been left stranded. Last night one of those workers, who cannot be named for security reasons, said: ‘The Taliban will kill me on the spot if they find me and they will blame it on Isis-K.

‘The Ministry of Defence got most of its people out but those of us who worked for the British Council are not covered by the MoD’s relocation scheme. We are stuck in Afghanista­n and we are in great danger.’

And Lord Dannatt, the head of the Army from 2006 to 2009, told Times Radio: ‘On the particular issue of those who we knew were in danger, people who had worked for us, interprete­rs, former locally-engaged civilians, this issue has been on politician­s’ desks for two to three years. Back in July, 45 senior officers wrote an open letter to the Government, saying there are people we are concerned about and if we don’t do the right thing, their blood will be on our hands. It is unfathomab­le why it would appear that the Government was asleep on watch.’

Last night Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman Layla Moran said: ‘There is no question that Dominic Raab must resign. He failed to return from holiday. He failed to pick up the phone. Dominic Raab will go down as of the worst Foreign Secretarie­s in history.’

The last British troops involved in the dramatic evacuation mission at Kabul airport are expected to return home today. Paratroope­rs and other soldiers from 16 Air Assault Brigade took off from Afghanista­n on Saturday but flew to third countries to await connecting flights to the UK.

Yesterday Boris Johnson praised their efforts which led to more than 15,000 vulnerable Afghans, UK nationals and foreign citizens being airlifted ahead of tomorrow’s deadline for Western troops to leave the country.’

The Prime Minister also said that Britain will ‘engage’ with the Taliban – but insisted that they must let refugees leave Afghanista­n and prevent terrorism to receive billions in aid. However, he stopped short of saying the UK would ‘recognise’ the Taliban government.

It came as the insurgents defied their own pledges to lead a more inclusive regime after fighters killed a well-known folk singer and women were banned from television and radio. Fawad Andarabi was shot in the head after his home was searched by militia.

Former UK ambassador to Afghanista­n Sir Nicholas Kay said of the Taliban yesterday: ‘I don’t think they’ve changed. One of their strengths is their single-mindedness and their strength of conviction and their faith in what they are doing and their cause.’

Meanwhile it was claimed yesterday that the decision by Mr Raab to remain on holiday in Crete at the start of the crisis cost vital days that meant up to 1,000 people have not been evacuated who could have been. One minister told The Sunday Times: ‘The PM wanted third countries involved and Raab did nothing. Boris is exasperate­d that the Foreign Office has not done what he told them.’

A senior official in the Pakistani government told the paper that Mr Raab had shown no interest in talking to them, claiming that he did not make a single phone call to the Afghan or Pakistani foreign ministers in the six months before the crisis. ‘He just didn’t care,’ the official said. The Foreign Office said Mr Raab had spoken twice to

the Pakistani foreign minister, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, on August 22 and again on Friday.

But they could not point to earlier conversati­ons and admitted that responsibi­lity for speaking to the Afghan foreign minister was delegated to Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon, minister for South Asia. Lisa Nandy, Labour’s shadow foreign secretary, said: ‘When the Foreign Secretary sits down in front of the foreign affairs select committee this week, he has serious questions to answer.’

And last night, former SAS commander Colonel Richard Williams said of the Government’s performanc­e: ‘It gives the impression that Whitehall was too concerned with Covid, Brexit and other domestic matters to focus on the humanitari­an consequenc­es of the Trump-Taliban deal of February 2020.’ Liberal Democrat defence spokesman in the House of Lords Baroness Smith of Newnham said: ‘Dominic Raab should consider his position. Even since his delayed return from Crete I don’t think Mr Raab has been fully engaged.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom