USA TODAY International Edition

Senator: Exit was ‘ fatally flawed’

Top Democrat blasts administra­tion amid Blinken hearing

- Deirdre Shesgreen

WASHINGTON – A top Senate Democrat on Tuesday blasted the Biden administra­tion’s handling of the U. S. withdrawal from Afghanista­n as “fatally flawed” and threatened to subpoena Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin if he doesn’t agree to testify “in the near future.”

The sharp rebuke from Sen. Bob Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, came as Secretary of State Antony Blinken faced a second day of intense questionin­g by lawmakers furious over the chaotic U. S. exit from Afghanista­n.

“The execution of the U. S. withdrawal was clearly and fatally flawed,” Menendez, D- N. J., told Blinken in opening remarks. “This committee expects to receive a full explanatio­n of the administra­tion’s decisions on Afghanista­n since coming into office last January. There has to be accountabi­lity.”

Republican­s called President Joe Biden’s handling of the withdrawal an epic military and foreign policy disaster. That included even some of those

who previously supported the decision to end the war.

“I’ve advocated for an end to the Afghan war for over a decade, I’m glad it’s finally over,” said Sen. Rand Paul, R- Ky. “But never in my worst nightmares did anyone ... conceive of such a colossal incompeten­ce.”

He faulted the Biden administra­tion for leaving U. S. military equipment behind and for closing Bagram Airfield too early in the withdrawal, among other steps. And he grilled Blinken over reports that an Aug. 29 drone strike may have killed an Afghan aid worker and his family – not Islamic State terrorists, as Pentagon leaders have asserted.

“Was he an aid worker or an ISIS- K operative?” Paul asked, referring to Islamic State affiliates in Kabul.

Blinken said he didn’t know and the administra­tion is reviewing the matter.

“You’d think you’d kind of know before you off someone with a predator drone,” Paul responded, arguing that if the man killed was an Afghan civilian, the American strike could be used as propaganda for the recruitmen­t of potential terrorists.

Blinken strongly defended Biden’s decision to end America’s 20- year war in Afghanista­n and the administra­tion’s handling of the evacuation. He said no one in the U. S. government predicted Afghan security forces would surrender to the Taliban so quickly, a surprise developmen­t that paved the way for the militant Islamic group to take over the country within days.

“Even the most pessimisti­c assessment­s did not predict that government forces in Kabul would collapse while U. S. forces remained,” Blinken said. “They were focused on what would happen after the United States withdrew, from September onward.”

After the Afghan forces disintegra­ted, Blinken said, the State Department and the Pentagon officials orchestrat­ed “an extraordin­ary effort” to evacuate U. S. citizens and Afghan allies over the course over two weeks, before the last U. S. forces withdrew from Kabul at the end of August.

“They worked around the clock to get American citizens, Afghans who helped us, citizens of our allies and partners, and at- risk Afghans on planes ( and) out of the country,” Blinken told the committee. “In the end, we completed one of the biggest airlifts in history, with 124,000 people evacuated to safety.”

Lawmakers in both parties remain deeply frustrated that the State Department did not begin a mass evacuation earlier, targeting Afghans who worked for the U. S. military during the war and who are now acutely vulnerable to Taliban reprisals. They are also concerned about the estimated 100 U. S. citizens who are still in Afghanista­n and seeking to leave.

But Tuesday’s session was not a bipartisan pile- on. Several Democrats said there was no clean way for the U. S. to leave Afghanista­n after years of executing a failed mission that shifted from defeating al- Qaida to nation- building.

Sen. Brian Schatz, D- Hawaii, said Washington pundits and defense contractor­s are coming out about how the war ended “because they didn’t want it to ever end.”

“They’re mad because they think we should be an occupying force indefinitely, and they know that position is untenable,” he said. “They won’t acknowledg­e the fundamenta­l mistake was that we invaded a country in Central Asia without a good understand­ing of its people, its history or origins or of its culture.”

‘ Stop with the hypocrisy’

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D- N. H., said she and other senators tried for years to speed up the special immigrant visa ( SIV) process for Afghans who served alongside U. S. troops, as translator­s and in other roles, but those efforts were stymied by Republican­s in Congress and President Donald Trump’s administra­tion. She questioned how GOP lawmakers could be expressing outrage now over their fate and that of Afghan women.

“There were a few Republican­s in the Senate who blocked us year after year from getting more SIV applicants to the United States,” she said, “and I want to know where that outrage was during the negotiatio­ns by the Trump administra­tion and former Secretary ( of State Mike) Pompeo when they were giving away the rights of women and girls.”

She was referring to the 2020 agreement that the Trump administra­tion signed with the Taliban, under which the U. S. agreed to a full military withdrawal by May 1, 2021. In exchange, the Taliban agreed to stop attacking American troops and sever their ties with alQaida, the terrorist group that launched the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the U. S.

“Secretary Pompeo came before this committee and blew off questions about what they were doing to pressure the Taliban to have women at the negotiatin­g table for that peace treaty,” Shaheen said in a flash of anger. “Let’s stop with the hypocrisy of who’s to blame. There are a lot of people to blame, and we all share in it.”

Menendez called Trump’s agreement with the Taliban a “surrender deal” that was “clearly built on a set of lies.” Under that agreement, he noted, the U. S. agreed to the release of 5,000 Taliban prisoners, many of whom were hardened fighters who quickly returned to the battlefield.

But Menendez, normally a White House ally, made it clear he has no intention of shielding a Democratic administra­tion from scrutiny over Afghanista­n. He and the ranking Republican on the committee, Sen. James Risch of Idaho, demanded Austin testify about the U. S. exit.

“A full accounting of the U. S. response to this crisis is not complete without the Pentagon, especially when it comes to understand­ing the complete collapse of the U. S. trained and funded Afghan military,” Menendez said. “His the decision not to appear before the committee will affect my personal judgment on Department of Defense nominees.”

He said he expects Austin to testify soon, and if he refuses, “I may consider the use of committee subpoena power to compel him and others.”

Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said Austin had a conflict and would be testifying before Congress later this month.

“He greatly respects the oversight role of the Congress, and he looks forward to testifying at the end of this month before the Senate and House Armed Services Committees,” Kirby said.

Some foreign policy experts said Congress’ demand for “accountabi­lity” over the execution of U. S. withdrawal was ludicrous given that lawmakers essentiall­y rubber stamped two decades of a failed U. S. policy in Afghanista­n, including massive civilian deaths and rampant government corruption.

“I have a tough time not rolling my eyes at the sudden interest in concern and oversight,” Daniel DePetris, a fellow at Defense Priorities, a Washington­based think tank that advocates for restraint in U. S. military policy, tweeted on Tuesday.

“Did the evacuation process have problems? Obviously,” he wrote. “Did counterins­urgency work? No. Was nation- building a colossal waste of taxpayer money? Yes. Where was the righteous indignatio­n then?”

Aaron David Miller, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace and former State Department official during multiple administra­tions, said it’s unlikely there will be any true accountabi­lity for a cascade of mistakes over the entire course of the 20- year war. There’s too much partisansh­ip and it’s too complex for lawmakers to tackle in a meaningful way, Miller said in a tweet Tuesday.

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 ?? DREW ANGERER/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Secretary of State Antony Blinken testifies about the Biden administra­tion’s handling of the U. S. withdraw from Afghanista­n at a Senate committee hearing Tuesday.
DREW ANGERER/ GETTY IMAGES Secretary of State Antony Blinken testifies about the Biden administra­tion’s handling of the U. S. withdraw from Afghanista­n at a Senate committee hearing Tuesday.

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