World Insights: Fallout of botched Afghan exit overwhelms White House

Source: Xinhua| 2021-08-18 16:27:48|Editor: huaxia

WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- The White House is finding itself in a new crisis after a botched withdrawal of its troops from Afghanistan, overwhelmed by withering criticism from home and abroad.

A viral video clip shows a crowd of Afghans running alongside a U.S. military transport aircraft, with some clinging to the fuselage, as it gained speed on the tarmac at an airport in Kabul, capital of Afghanistan. Another segment films what appears to be individuals falling in mid-air after the plane took off.

The terrifying scenes reportedly occurred after the Taliban entered Kabul over the past weekend in a swift offensive that brought what many described as an embarrassing end to two decades of U.S. military presence in Afghanistan. The Taliban, which ruled the landlocked country at the crossroads of Central and South Asia in the late 1990s, was toppled by U.S.-led forces in 2001.

Pundits recently used the phrase "Saigon moment" to describe what was unfolding in Kabul, where photographers captured images of a Chinook helicopter flying near the U.S. embassy amid a hasty evacuation ahead of the Taliban's complete takeover of the city.

The photos were eerily similar to scenes from the fall of Saigon at the end of the Vietnam War, when the United States hurried to airlift the last of its personnel and some Vietnamese from the roof of its embassy in late April 1975, a moment widely believed to be a symbol of Washington's failings in the Southeast Asian country.

In a defensive position, senior U.S. officials have sought to reject such a comparison and claimed that the country has achieved its mission in the Afghan war.

Speaking from the White House on Monday, U.S. President Joe Biden alleged "our mission in Afghanistan was never supposed to have been nation building," while acknowledging that the situation in the country "did unfold more quickly than we had anticipated."

The Donald Trump administration brokered a deal with the Taliban in 2020 that laid out plans for U.S. forces to fully withdraw from Afghanistan by May 1, 2021. Biden announced in April that he would follow through on the agreement and vowed that he would not pass the war onto another president.

Since invading Afghanistan in 2001 in response to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that killed almost 3,000 people in the United States, Washington has spent 2.26 trillion U.S. dollars on the war, which includes operations in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, according to Brown University's Costs of War Project.

Figures from the project also showed that more than 2,400 U.S. service members, some 3,800 American contractors, more than 1,100 other allied troops, and an estimated 66,000 Afghan national military and police were killed in the conflict, along with more than 47,000 civilians.

Trump has recently directed a series of harshly-worded statements against Biden, saying that "there has never been a withdrawal operation that has been handled so disastrously" and that "it will go down as one of the greatest defeats in American history." Many Democrats were also critical of how the Biden administration had managed the U.S. exit from Afghanistan.

As the drumbeat of criticism from across the political spectrum continued, Biden's national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on Tuesday that "there were chaotic scenes yesterday" but argued that "even well-drawn plans don't survive first contact with reality."

Some allies are also lashing out at the United States over the Afghan debacle, as they have been left scrambling to get their nationals out of the country.

The decision was "ultimately made by the Americans" and "domestic political reasons" were partly to blame, German Chancellor Angela Merkel reportedly said on Monday. Peter Ricketts, Britain's former national security adviser, tweeted that the United States' "unilateralism over their withdrawal has done real damage to" the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) alliance.

Richard Haass, president of U.S. think tank Council on Foreign Relations, wrote on Twitter that he believes "the grim aftermath of America's strategic and moral failure will reinforce questions about U.S. reliability among friends and foes far and wide."

Pentagon officials said on Tuesday that there are about 4,000 U.S. troops on the ground in Kabul to support the evacuation operation that could be transporting between 5,000 and 9,000 people a day if efforts are ramping up.

U.S. commanders in Kabul are in contact with Taliban commanders outside the Kabul airport, according to Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby. "There is communication between them and us," Kirby noted. "There's been no hostile interactions from the Taliban to our operations at the airport."

At a press conference in Kabul on Tuesday, Zabihullah Mujahid, spokesman for the Taliban, said that they "don't want any internal and external enemies."

"We don't want to repeat any conflict, any war again," Mujahid said. "Animosities have come to an end, and we would like to live peacefully."

Nearly 400,000 Afghans were forced from their homes since the beginning of the year, joining 2.9 million others already internally displaced across the country at the end of 2020, according to the United Nations Refugee Agency. Enditem

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