Houston Chronicle

Biden seems set to keep GIs in Afghanista­n

- By Robert Burns

WASHINGTON — Without coming out and saying it, President Joe Biden seems ready to let lapse a May 1 deadline for completing a withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanista­n.

Orderly withdrawal­s take time, and Biden is running out of it.

Biden has inched so close to the deadline that his indecision amounts almost to a decision to put off, at least for several months, a pullout of the remaining 2,500 troops and continue supporting the Afghan military at the risk of a Taliban backlash.

Removing all the troops and their equipment in the next three weeks — along with coalition partners that can’t get out on their own — would be difficult logistical­ly, as Biden himself suggested late last month.

“It’s going to be hard to meet the May 1 deadline,” he said. “Just in terms of tactical reasons, it’s hard to get those troops out.”

Tellingly, he added, “And if we leave, we’re going to do so in a safe and orderly way.”

James Stavridis, a retired Navy admiral who was NATO’s top commander from 2009 to 2013, says it would be unwise at this point to get out quickly.

“Sometimes not making a decision becomes a decision, which seems the case with the May 1 deadline,” Stavridis said by email. “The most prudent course of action feels like a sixmonth extension and an attempt to get the Taliban truly meeting their promises — essentiall­y permitting a legitimate ‘conditions based’ withdrawal in the fall.”

There are crosscurre­nts of pressure on Biden.

On the one hand, he has argued for years, including during his time as vice president when President Barack Obama ordered a huge buildup of U.S. forces, that Afghanista­n is better handled as a smaller-scale counterter­rorism mission. Countering Russia and China since has emerged as a higher priority.

On the other hand, current and former military officers have argued that leaving now, with the Taliban in a position of relative strength and the Afghan government in a fragile state, would risk losing what has been gained in 20 years of fighting.

“A withdrawal would not only leave America more vulnerable to terrorist threats; it would also have catastroph­ic effects in Afghanista­n and the region that would not be in the interest of any of the key actors, including the Taliban,” a bipartisan experts group known as the Afghan Study Group concluded in a February report.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Soldiers stand guard for President Donald Trump during a Thanksgivi­ng visit to Bagram Air Field in Afghanista­n in 2019.
Associated Press file photo Soldiers stand guard for President Donald Trump during a Thanksgivi­ng visit to Bagram Air Field in Afghanista­n in 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States