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US govt was ready for worst-case scenarios in Afghanistan: Blinken

14 Sep 2021 By AFP

Washington, US – US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Monday insisted the Biden administration had prepared for worst-case scenarios in Afghanistan, as irate lawmakers accused the White House of presiding over a historic disaster that saw Taliban takeover.

The famously even-tempered top US diplomat stayed cool as he faced the toughest grilling of his career at the first congressional hearing on President Joe Biden’s end to the 20-year war, which brought a swift victory by the Taliban.

As rival Republicans raised their voices, waved pictures of slain soldiers and occasionally demanded he resign, Blinken repeatedly noted that former president Donald Trump had set the withdrawal from Afghanistan.

“We inherited a deadline; we did not inherit a plan,” Blinken told the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

After Trump’s February 2020 deal with the Taliban and drawdown of US troops, the Islamist movement was in the ‘strongest military position it had been since 9/11’, the attacks 20 years ago that prompted America’s longest war, Blinken said.

Blinken said the Biden administration was ‘intensely focused’ on the safety of Americans and had been ‘constantly assessing’ how long the Western-backed government could survive.

“Even the most pessimistic assessments did not predict that government forces in Kabul would collapse while US forces remained,” Blinken said.

“Nonetheless, we planned and exercised a wide range of contingencies,” he added.

“The evacuation itself was an extraordinary effort – under the most difficult conditions imaginable – by our diplomats, by our military, by our intelligence professionals.”

Republican lawmakers, seeing a vulnerability for Biden, have portrayed the pullout as chaotic and accused the President of abandoning Americans to the fate of the Taliban.

“This was an unmitigated disaster of epic proportions,” said Representative Mike McCaul, the top Republican on the committee.
“I never thought in my lifetime that I would see an unconditional surrender to the Taliban,” he added.

Accusing the administration of ‘betrayal’ of Afghan allies, McCaul pointed out that the Taliban’s caretaker government included figures such as Sirajuddin Haqqani, whose arrest is sought by Washington on terrorism allegations.

“We are now at the mercy of the Taliban’s reign of terror,” McCaul said, warning of a ‘dark veil of sharia’a law’ as the Taliban reinstitute their draconian treatment of women.

Republicans noted that last year’s agreement with the Taliban – signed in the presence of Blinken’s predecessor Mike Pompeo – had set conditions for the withdrawal.

“You can’t blame the Trump administration for your failure,” said Representative Greg Steube. “Your administration in the White House was seeing in real time what was happening in Afghanistan and you did absolutely nothing to stop it,” he said.

Blinken, however, suggested that the Taliban violated the accord through their ‘relentless march’, even as the Trump administration pressed the former Afghan government to free battle-hardened fighters.

Blinken said that the new administration’s planning made it possible to draw down the embassy within 48 hours, and secure the airport and start evacuations within 72 hours.

The US and its allies ultimately evacuated 124,000 people out of Afghanistan.

Blinken said there was ‘no evidence that staying longer would have made the Afghan security forces or the Afghan government any more resilient or self-sustaining’.

“If 20 years and hundreds of billions of dollars in support, equipment and training did not suffice, why would another year, another five, another ten?”

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