Boston Herald

Biden flat out lying

Favorable TV host and the military all point out his errors

- Peter Lucas Peter Lucas is a veteran Massachuse­tts political reporter and columnist.

It is not President Lyndon Johnson, Walter Cronkite and the Vietnam War. But it is close.

This time, though, it is President Biden, George Stephanopo­ulos and the war in Afghanista­n.

Back in 1968 widely respected CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite reported that the controvers­ial war in Vietnam, which had so divided the country, was lost, hopelessly “mired in stalemate.”

Coming from Cronkite, a battle-hardened World War II reporter, deemed the most trusted newsman on television, the report shook the foundation­s of the Johnson administra­tion.

Such was Cronkite’s influence.

Johnson, following the broadcast, reportedly said, ”If I’ve lost Cronkite, I’ve lost the war.” Or “If I’ve lost Cronkite, I’ve lost America.” Or “If I’ve lost Cronkite, I’ve lost Middle America.”

There is no proof that Johnson said any of those things, or if he even watched the broadcast.

But that was what was reported. The myth took hold and weeks later Johnson, who had repeatedly lied to the American people about the war, announced that he would not seek reelection. He was a broken man.

Something similar happened when George Stephanopo­ulos of ABC questioned Biden on Aug. 19 about the war in Afghanista­n. Biden lied to the American people about the war just the way Johnson did

Now, Stephanopo­ulos is no Walter Cronkite.

They don’t make Cronkites anymore. Nor do they make network reporters who strive for objectivit­y, the way Cronkite and his peers did. We live in a different era.

Stephanopo­ulos was never a reporter, like Cronkite. He was a longtime Democrat political operative before he went into television, like so many other television news celebritie­s. He worked for Bill and Hillary Clinton when they occupied the White House.

He is the highest-ranking former Democrat operative working as a reporter and commentato­r on television news.

Democrats who are reported on or are interviewe­d by Stephanopo­ulos are practicall­y guaranteed a friendly reception. They are asked softball questions that they can hit out of the park.

That is probably why Biden, who runs away from reporters at every opportunit­y, agreed to the Stephanopo­ulos interview. Stephanopo­ulos is a connected fellow Democrat, so what could go wrong?

In retrospect that interview, in which Biden repeatedly lied about Afghanista­n, was the turning point in events that have shaken the already troubled Biden presidency to its core.

Biden’s claims that his generals did not advise him against withdrawin­g the 2,500 troops, or against sticking to his Aug. 31 withdrawal, turned out to be untrue.

“They wanted you to keep about 2,500 troops,” Stephanopo­ulos said.

Biden: “No, they didn’t. It was split. That wasn’t true.”

Stephanopo­ulos: “So no one told you — your military advisers did not tell, you, ‘No, we should just keep 2,500 troops.’”

Biden: “No. No one said that to me that I can recall.”

Biden’s top military commanders contradict­ed Biden last week in revealing testimony before both House and Senate committees.

Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr., head of U.S. Central Command, both testified under oath that they had advised Biden to keep at least 2,500 troops in Afghanista­n and to reject an arbitrary timeline for withdrawin­g from the country.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, the third military leader to testify, confirmed that the advice was personally received by Biden. It was advice that Biden rejected, and it led to the humiliatin­g chaotic evacuation at the Kabul Airport.

Thirteen U.S. soldiers lost their lives to a suicide bomber during the evacuation, along with hundreds of Afghans. In addition, 10 Afghans, including seven children, were killed by a U.S. air strike when they were mistaken for terrorists.

This is all on Biden. He, like Johnson before him, told lie after lie about the war, including the lie about not leaving any Americans or Afghan allies behind.

It was all unnecessar­y. All Biden had to do was follow the advice of people who know more about things than he does

The irony is that Biden’s presidency has come apart not from an attack from the right, but from an interview with Stephanopo­ulos, a Democrat friendly interviewe­r who suddenly — and uncharacte­ristically — drilled Biden like Cronkite would have. And Biden lied.

Biden may not have “lost” Stephanopo­ulos and the country the way LBJ “lost” Cronkite. But it surely is a turning point in Biden’s downward spiral

If you’ve lost Stephanopo­ulos, Mr. President, you’re cooked.

 ?? AP FILE ?? ‘NO ONE SAID THAT TO ME’: President Biden in August told TV host George Stephanopo­ulos, below left, on the air that, the U.S. should just keep 2,500 troops in Afghanista­n and not hold fast to the Aug. 31 withdrawal date, but now Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr., head of U.S. Central Command, both testified under oath that they had advised Biden to do both of those things.
AP FILE ‘NO ONE SAID THAT TO ME’: President Biden in August told TV host George Stephanopo­ulos, below left, on the air that, the U.S. should just keep 2,500 troops in Afghanista­n and not hold fast to the Aug. 31 withdrawal date, but now Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr., head of U.S. Central Command, both testified under oath that they had advised Biden to do both of those things.
 ?? GEtty IMaGES FILE PHotoS ?? DIDN’T TAKE ADVICE: General Kenneth McKenzie Jr., USMC commander, U.S. Central Command, responds to questions during a House Armed Services Committee hearing on the conclusion of military operations in Afghanista­n on Sept. 29 in Washington, D.C.
GEtty IMaGES FILE PHotoS DIDN’T TAKE ADVICE: General Kenneth McKenzie Jr., USMC commander, U.S. Central Command, responds to questions during a House Armed Services Committee hearing on the conclusion of military operations in Afghanista­n on Sept. 29 in Washington, D.C.
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