Dayton Daily News

Biden must make new era work after ending long war

- E.J. Dionne Jr. E.J. Dionne Jr. writes for The Washington Post.

It will go down in history as one of the most unabashedl­y antiwar speeches ever given by an American president.

We are accustomed to martial rhetoric from commanders in chief, soaring words and calls for sacrifice on behalf of causes larger than any of us.

President Joe Biden broke with all that on Tuesday in explaining and justifying his decision to pull U.S. troops from Afghanista­n. One simple sentence summarized his gut instinct and his historical judgment: “We’ve been a nation too long at war.”

Biden did something else that was unusual in presidenti­al speeches: He took on the arguments of his critics, one by one, and asked the country to see why he was right and they were wrong.

He was especially forceful in rejecting the most alluring claim of respected voices in the foreign policy and military establishm­ents — architects, it should be said, of many of the policies that led us to this point. Maintainin­g a small American force, they insisted, could have held off a Taliban victory and prevented a rout of the United States’ Afghan allies.

Biden described this option several times as the “low grade,” “low risk” approach, and asserted that this halfway house of a policy misdescrib­ed the alternativ­es he faced.

It was not withdraw or go small. It was withdraw or go big. “That was the choice — the real choice — between leaving or escalating,” he said. “I was not going to extend this forever war.”

The history of the war suggests that Biden is right, even if we will never know for certain. Once it reversed the withdrawal set in motion by former president Donald Trump, the United States would most likely at some point have faced another choice, between a surge of U.S. troops or an ignominiou­s battlefiel­d defeat.

“When I hear that we could’ve, should’ve continued the so-called lowgrade effort in Afghanista­n, at low risk to our service members, at low cost,” Biden said, “I don’t think enough people understand how much we have asked of the 1 percent of this country who put that uniform on, who are willing to put their lives on the line in defense of our nation.”

He spoke arrestingl­y of “18 veterans, on average, who die by suicide every single day in America,” and concluded: “There’s nothing low-grade or lowrisk or low-cost about any war.” Rarely has a president described the burdens of warfare so starkly.

There will be arguments over whether we should cel- ebrate (as Biden devoutly hopes we do) the extraordin­ary heroism in the airlifting of more than 120,000 people, including almost all remaining Americans; or whether we should criticize Biden for leaving perhaps 200 Americans behind, along with the tens of thousands of our Afghan allies to whom we owe much.

Republican­s — whether they supported or opposed Trump’s decisions that immensely strengthen­ed the Taliban — suddenly spoke with one voice. They contended that whatever happened in the past, all the problems and failures now rested on Biden’s shoulders.

This claim overlooks the mistakes of two decades and is especially hypocritic­al coming from Trump’s die-hard defenders and those who were silent when Trump set this outcome in motion.

But the very pugnacious­ness of Biden’s speech showed that he is ready to own the consequenc­es of his choice.

His task now is to minimize the human and strategic damage of a disorderly end to a long era of war — and to make good on his promise of a new era in which American power will be used more prudently, more effectivel­y and with fewer illusions.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States