The Scottish Mail on Sunday

The West’s humiliatin­g retreat will strengthen China’s belief that this is their time. And perhaps they’re right

Britain’s former man in Washington writes for the MoS

- By KIM DARROCH EX-NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER AND FORMER BRITISH AMBASSADOR TO THE UNITED STATES

MAKE no mistake, this is a foreign policy failure of historic proportion­s. After 20 years, more than two trillion dollars of investment, the grievous loss of 475 British forces, and more than 2,000 American soldiers and hundreds more of other nationalit­ies, the best-equipped and besttraine­d forces that the West can assemble are being drummed out of Afghanista­n by a Kalashniko­vtoting militia.

Did it have to end like this? Certainly, there is bound to be an intense debate about what went wrong as the public consciousn­ess is indelibly imprinted with shocking images from Kabul airport.

Some will argue that we stayed far too long, that we should have left immediatel­y after the USbacked Northern Alliance deposed the Taliban government in November 2001.

I disagree. Had we cut and run then, we would have left Afghanista­n in chaos, with the country ruined and an interim government without funds or authority. Al Qaeda would have been back within months.

I believe that we should still be there. We should have announced at the outset that our exit would be dictated by outcomes, not dates: that we would stay for as long as it took to ensure that Afghanista­n could never again become a haven for terrorists.

This propositio­n invites dissent on several fronts: that no government can afford the unending cost in blood and money of a ‘forever war’; that one glance at Afghanista­n’s history demonstrat­es the folly of attempting ‘nation building’; even that such a policy would amount to colonisati­on.

But the reality is that the modern world is strewn with, if not ‘forever wars’, then at least ‘forever interventi­ons’.

The US has kept more than 28,000 troops in South Korea for almost 70 years, since the 1953 ceasefire in the Korean War (there has never been a peace treaty between the North and South).

For 47 years there has been a UN force of 1,000 soldiers in Cyprus since the Turkish invasion. A European force of several hundred has stayed in Bosnia since the Dayton Agreement at the end of the Balkans War divided the country into two self-governing entities. A Nato deployment of more than 2,000 has been maintained in Kosovo since the Serbs left.

All of these deployment­s pre-date the interventi­on in Afghanista­n. With each of these conflicts, a political settlement has proved elusive. But the continuing internatio­nal military presence has contribute­d critically to each area’s stability and security.

It has meant that children have gone to school, had careers, lived peaceful and productive lives. Indeed, only those who have lived in a war zone will appreciate how very precious such achievemen­ts are. And, crucially, this is what the internatio­nal forces were providing across much of Afghanista­n until the abject Trump deal with the Taliban in February 2020 – described as a ‘surrender agreement’ by Trump’s former National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster – and President Joe Biden’s disastrous decision earlier this year to implement it.

As for the argument that public opinion would not tolerate further casualties or costs, of course every death or life-changing injury is a tragedy, for the individual, the family and the country. But the reality is that casualties and costs have been massively lessened over the past decade, as coalition forces have reduced to a few thousand and moved back from the front line to a training and support role.

And talk to any soldier and they will tell you they want to get the job done – to come home believing that they delivered the mission.

Indeed, it’s crystal clear from the outpouring of anger from those British forces who served in Afghanista­n that they disagree with the withdrawal; that they feel passionate­ly that it makes the sacrifice of their comrades look pointless. But it is done. The last British troops will be out within 48 hours. So what does the future hold?

For Afghanista­n, it looks bleak. Thousands will try to leave overland, creating chaos at the borders. Rebellions will spring up around the country. The economy will seize up: the banks are already running out of money and the country’s reserves will remain frozen in American banks as possible future leverage. Perhaps Russia and China will step in to help – but with conditions.

And, most chillingly, on the evidence of the terrible carnage at Kabul airport last week, terrorists are again roaming the land. As for the global picture, the fall of Kabul comes within weeks of President Biden announcing: ‘America is back.’

How hollow that now sounds. His decisions to continue with the withdrawal and the August 31 deadline, despite requests from allies to extend, look more like ‘America First.’

As regard to US-UK relations, President Biden’s actions illustrate the eternal truth that no relationsh­ip is that special when set against perceived American national security interests. But they also mean that Biden’s presidency, after his strong start on domestic policy, is now irretrieva­bly tarnished.

Russia and China will have watched this self-inflicted Western defeat in Afghanista­n with rapt attention.

Russia has, of course, had its own troubles there, with the failure of its 1980s interventi­on in the Afghan civil war. But Vladimir Putin must be looking at the vacuum developing there and contemplat­ing what opportunit­ies it offers.

As for the Chinese, they famously take the long view. They will judge the American withdrawal as confirmati­on of a fundamenta­l lack of strategic patience: here today but then gone before the job is done.

Beijing has a tricky relationsh­ip with the Taliban. The Chinese leaders will worry about the Taliban

British forces are angry… sacrifices made by comrades were pointless

Beijing will reach out to the Taliban while the West shuns them

victory inspiring resistance among their own, oppressed, Muslim minority of Uighurs. But my guess is that China’s strategy will be to reach out to the Taliban while the West is shunning them; to buy influence through recognitio­n, support and funding.

Significan­tly, they will continue to construct military installati­ons in the South China Sea, to bully and intimidate their neighbours and to threaten Taiwan. All the while building relationsh­ips and financial leverage globally, through the Belt and Road initiative, which involves Chinese investment in 70 countries in Central Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

This Western retreat will add to their belief that this is their time. And perhaps they are right.

Perhaps the pictures on our TV screens do foreshadow a fundamenta­l shift in global power.

After Iraq and Afghanista­n, I wonder how long it will be before any American President risks another major internatio­nal interventi­on in pursuit of a better world.

In February 1941, Henry Luce, the founder of Time magazine and champion of American internatio­nalism, published a famous editorial entitled ‘The American Century’, calling on it to lead the world and transform internatio­nal relations through the applicatio­n of ‘American principles’.

Were he alive today, I wonder what he would be thinking.

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