From the NYT/Yahoo:
“Miscue After Miscue, U.S.
Exit Plan Unravels”
The nation’s top national
security officials assembled at the Pentagon early on April 24 for a secret
meeting to plan the final withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan. It was
two weeks after President Joe Biden had announced the exit over the objection
of his generals, but now they were carrying out his orders. In a secure room in
the building’s “extreme basement,” two floors below ground level, Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin and Gen. Mark Milley, chair of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, met with top White House and intelligence officials. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken joined by video conference. After four hours, two things were
clear. First, Pentagon officials said they could pull out the remaining 3,500
U.S. troops, almost all deployed at Bagram Airfield, by July 4 — two months
earlier than the Sept. 11 deadline Biden had set. The plan would mean closing
the airfield that was the U.S. military hub in Afghanistan, but Defense
Department officials did not want a dwindling, vulnerable force and the risks
of service members dying in a war declared lost.
Second, State Department
officials said they would keep the U.S. Embassy open, with more than 1,400
remaining Americans protected by 650 Marines and soldiers. An intelligence assessment
presented at the meeting estimated that Afghan forces could hold off the
Taliban for one to two years. There was brief talk of an emergency evacuation
plan — helicopters would ferry Americans to the civilian airport in Kabul, the
capital — but no one raised, let alone imagined, what the United States would
do if the Taliban gained control of access to that airport, the only safe way
in and out of the country once Bagram closed. The plan was a good one, the
group concluded.
Four months later, the plan is in
shambles as Biden struggles to explain how a withdrawal most Americans
supported went so badly wrong in its execution. On Friday, as scenes of
continuing chaos and suffering at the airport were broadcast around the world,
Biden went so far as to say that “I cannot promise what the final outcome will
be, or what it will be — that it will be without risk of loss.” Interviews with
key participants in the last days of the war show a series of misjudgments and
the failure of Biden’s calculation that pulling out U.S. troops — prioritizing
their safety before evacuating U.S. citizens and Afghan allies — would result
in an orderly withdrawal. Biden administration officials consistently believed
they had the luxury of time. Military commanders overestimated the will of the
Afghan forces to fight for their own country and underestimated how much the
American withdrawal would destroy their confidence. The administration put too
much faith in Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who fled Kabul as it fell. And although
Biden White House officials say that they held more than 50 meetings on embassy
security and evacuations, and that so far no Americans have died in the
operation, all the planning failed to prevent the mayhem when the Taliban took
over Kabul in a matter of days. Only in recent weeks did the administration
change course from its original plan. By then it was too late.
A Sinking Feeling Five
days after the April meeting at the Pentagon, Milley told reporters on a flight
back to Washington from Hawaii that the Afghan government’s troops were
“reasonably well equipped, reasonably well trained, reasonably well led.” He
declined to say whether they could stand on their own without support from the
United States. “We frankly don’t know yet,” he said. “We have to wait
and see how things develop over the summer.” Biden’s top intelligence
officers echoed that uncertainty, privately offering concerns about the Afghan
abilities. But they still predicted that a complete Taliban takeover was not
likely for at least 18 months. One senior administration official, discussing
classified intelligence information that had been presented to Biden, said
there was no sense that the Taliban were on the march. In fact, they
were. Across Afghanistan, the Taliban were methodically gathering strength by
threatening tribal leaders in every community they entered with warnings to
surrender or die. They collected weapons, ammunition, volunteers and money as
they stormed from town to town, province to province.
In May, they launched a major
offensive in Helmand province in the south and six other areas of Afghanistan,
including Ghazni and Kandahar. In Washington, refugee groups grew increasingly
alarmed by what was happening on the ground and feared Taliban retribution
against thousands of translators, interpreters and others who had helped the
American war effort. Leaders of the groups estimated that as many as 100,000
Afghans and family members were now targets for Taliban revenge. On May 6,
representatives from several of the United States’ largest refugee groups,
including Human Rights First, the International Refugee Assistance Project, No
One Left Behind, and the Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service logged onto
Zoom for a call with National Security Council staff members. The groups
pleaded with the White House officials for a mass evacuation of Afghans and
urged them not to rely on a backlogged special visa program that could keep
Afghans waiting for months or years. There was no time for visas, they said,
and Afghans had to be removed quickly to stay alive. The response was cordial
but noncommittal, according to one participant, who recalled a sinking feeling
afterward that the White House had no plan. Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass., a
veteran and an ally of Biden's, echoed those concerns in his own discussions
with the administration. Moulton said he told anyone who would listen at the
White House, the State Department and the Pentagon that “they need to stop
processing visas in Afghanistan and just get people to safety.” But doing what
Moulton and the refugee groups wanted would have meant launching a dangerous
new military mission that would probably require a surge of troops just at the
moment that Biden had announced the opposite. It also ran counter to what the
Afghan government wanted, because a high-profile evacuation would amount to a
vote of no confidence in the government and its forces. The State Department
sped up its efforts to process visas and clear the backlog. Officials
overhauled the lengthy screening and vetting process and reduced processing
time — but only to under a year. Eventually, they issued more than 5,600
special visas from April to July, the largest number in the program’s history
but still a small fraction of the demand. The Taliban continued their advance
as the embassy in Kabul urged Americans to leave. On April 27, the embassy had
ordered nearly 3,000 members of its staff to depart, and on May 15, officials
there sent the latest in a series of warnings to Americans in the country:
“U.S. Embassy strongly suggests that U.S. citizens make plans to leave
Afghanistan as soon as possible.”
A Tense Meeting With Ghani On
June 25, Ghani met with Biden at the White House for what would become for the
foreseeable future the last meeting between an American president and the
Afghan leaders they had coaxed, cajoled and argued with over 20 years. When
the cameras were on at the beginning of the meeting, Ghani and Biden expressed
mutual admiration even though Ghani was fuming about the decision to pull out
U.S. troops. As soon as reporters were shooed out of the room, the tension was
clear. Ghani, a former World Bank official whom Biden regarded as
stubborn and arrogant, had three requests, according to an official familiar
with the conversation. He wanted the United States to be “conservative” in
granting exit visas to the interpreters and others, and “low key” about their
leaving the country so it would not look as if America lacked faith in his
government. He also wanted to speed up security assistance and secure an
agreement for the U.S. military to continue to conduct airstrikes and provide
overwatch from its planes and helicopters for his troops fighting the Taliban.
U.S. officials feared that the more they were drawn into direct combat with the
militant group, the more its fighters would treat U.S. diplomats as targets.
Biden agreed to provide the air support and to not make a public show of
the Afghan evacuations. Biden had his own request for Ghani. The Afghan
forces were stretched too thin, Biden told him, and should not try to fight
everywhere. He repeated American advice that Ghani consolidate Afghan forces
around key locations, but Ghani never took it. A week later, on July 2,
Biden, in an ebullient mood, gathered a small group of reporters to celebrate
new jobs numbers that he said showed that his economic recovery plan was
working. But all the questions he received were about news from Afghanistan that
the United States had abandoned Bagram Airfield, with little to no notice to
the Afghans. “It’s a rational drawdown with our allies,” he insisted,
“so there’s nothing unusual about it.”
But as the questions persisted,
on Afghanistan rather than the economy, he grew visibly annoyed. He recalled
Ghani’s visit and said, “I think they have the capacity to be able to sustain
the government,” although he added that there would have to be negotiations
with the Taliban. Then, for the first time, he was pressed on what the
administration would do to save Kabul if it came under direct attack. “I want
to talk about happy things, man,” he said. He insisted there was a plan. “We
have worked out an over-the-horizon capacity,” he said, meaning the
administration had contingency plans should things go badly. “But the Afghans
are going to have to be able to do it themselves with the air force they have,
which we’re helping them maintain,” he said. But by then, most of the U.S.
contractors who helped keep the Afghan planes flying had been withdrawn from
Bagram along with the troops. Military and intelligence officials acknowledge
they were worried that the Afghans would not be able to stay in the air. By
July 8, nearly all U.S. forces were out of Afghanistan as the Taliban continued
their surge across the country. In a speech that day from the White House
defending his decision to leave, Biden was in a bind trying to express
skepticism about the abilities of the Afghan forces while being careful not to
undermine their government. Afterward, he angrily responded to a reporter’s
comparison to Vietnam by insisting that “there’s going to be no circumstance
where you see people being lifted off the roof of an embassy of the United
States from Afghanistan. It is not at all comparable.” But five days later,
nearly two dozen U.S. diplomats, all in the Kabul embassy, sent a memo directly
to Blinken through the State Department’s “dissent” channel. The cable, first
reported by The Wall Street Journal, urged that evacuation flights for Afghans
begin in two weeks and that the administration move faster to register them for
visas.
The next day, in a move already
underway, the White House named a stepped-up effort “Operation Allies Refuge.” By
late July, Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr., head of U.S. Central Command who overseas
all military operations in the region, received permission from Austin to
extend the deployment of the amphibious assault ship Iwo Jima in the Gulf of
Oman, so that the Marines on board could be close enough to get to Afghanistan
to evacuate Americans. A week later, Austin was concerned enough to order the
expeditionary unit on the ship — about 2,000 Marines — to disembark and wait in
Kuwait so that they could reach Afghanistan quickly. By Aug. 3, top national
security officials met in Washington and heard an updated intelligence
assessment: District capitals across Afghanistan were falling rapidly to the
Taliban and the Afghan government could collapse in “days or weeks.” It was not
the most likely outcome, but it was an increasingly plausible one. “We’re
assisting the government so that the Talibs do not think this is going to be a
cakewalk, that they can conquer and take over the country,” the chief U.S.
envoy to Afghan peace talks, Zalmay Khalilzad, told the Aspen Security Forum on
Aug. 3. Days later, however, that is exactly what happened.
The End Game By Aug. 6,
the maps in the Pentagon showed a spreading stain of areas under Taliban
control. In some places, the Afghans had put up a fight, but in many others,
there was just surrender. That same day in Washington, the Pentagon
reviewed worst-case scenarios. If security further deteriorated, planning —
begun days after Biden’s withdrawal announcement in April — led by Elizabeth
Sherwood-Randall, the president’s homeland security adviser, called for flying
most of the embassy personnel out of the compound, and many out of the country,
while a small core group of diplomats operated from a backup site at the
airport. On its face, the Kabul airport made sense as an evacuation
point. Close to the center of the city, it could be as little as a 12-minute
drive and a three-minute helicopter flight from the embassy — logistics that
had helped reassure planners after the closure of Bagram, which was more than
50 miles and a far longer drive from Kabul. By Aug. 11, the Taliban
advances were so alarming that Biden asked his top national security advisers
in the White House Situation Room if it was time to send the Marines to Kabul
and to evacuate the embassy. He asked for an updated assessment of the
situation and authorized the use of military planes for evacuating Afghan
allies.
Overnight in Washington, Kandahar
and Ghazni were falling. National security officials were awakened as early as
4 a.m. Aug. 12 and told to gather for an urgent meeting a few hours later to
provide options to the president. Once assembled, Avril Haines, director of
national intelligence, told the group that the intelligence agencies could no
longer ensure that they could provide sufficient warning if the capital was
about to be under siege. Everyone looked at one another, one participant said,
and came to the same conclusion: It was time to get out. An hour later, Jake
Sullivan, Biden’s national security adviser, walked into the Oval Office to
deliver the group’s unanimous consensus to start an evacuation and deploy 3,000
Marines and Army soldiers to the airport. By Aug. 14, Biden was at Camp David
for what he hoped would be the start of a 10-day vacation. Instead, he spent
much of the day on dire video conference calls with his top aides. On one of
the calls, Austin urged all remaining personnel at the Kabul embassy be moved
immediately to the airport. It was a stunning turnaround from what Ned Price,
the State Department spokesperson, had said two days earlier: “The embassy
remains open, and we plan to continue our diplomatic work in Afghanistan.” Ross
Wilson, acting U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan and who was on the call, said the
staff still needed 72 hours to leave. “You have to move now,” Austin replied. Blinken
spoke by phone to Ghani the same day. The Afghan president was defiant,
according to one official familiar with the conversation, and insisted that he
would defend Afghanistan until the end. He did not tell Blinken that he was
already planning to flee his country, which U.S. officials first learned by
reading news reports. Later that day, the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan sent a
message saying it would pay for American citizens to get out of the country,
but warned that although there were reports that international commercial
flights were still operating from Kabul, “seats may not be available.” On Aug.
15, Ghani was gone. His departure — he would eventually turn up days later in
the United Arab Emirates — and scenes of the Taliban celebrating at his
presidential palace documented the collapse of the government.
By the end of the day, the
Taliban addressed the news media, declaring their intention to restore the
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. The evacuation of the Kabul embassy staff was
by that point underway as diplomats rushed to board military helicopters for
the short trip to the airport bunker. Others stayed behind long enough to burn
sensitive documents. Another official said embassy helicopters were blown up or
otherwise destroyed, which sent a cloud of smoke over the compound.
Many Americans and Afghans could
not reach the airport as Taliban fighters set up checkpoints on roads
throughout the city and beat some people, leaving top FBI officials concerned
about the possibility that the Taliban or criminal gangs might kidnap
Americans, a nightmare outcome with the U.S. military no longer in the country.
As Biden made plans the evening of Aug. 15 to address Americans the next day
about the situation, the American flag was lowered over the abandoned embassy.
The Green Zone, once the heart of the American effort to remake the country,
was again Taliban territory.
^ Even though this article only
goes up to August 15th and doesn’t include the continued failures of
Biden or his Administration it does give a good background of all the chances
Biden and his minions had to evacuate Americans, Westerners and Afghanis who
helped us in an organized way. Instead they put their head in the sand and refused
to face reality and now thousands upon thousands of men, women and children are
paying the deadly price for that. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/miscue-miscue-u-exit-plan-151402423.html
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