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‘Willful Blindness’ Describes Disastrous Afghanistan Retreat

What happened, how it happened, and who made it happen is not a pretty story.

Photo by Joel Rivera-Camacho / Unsplash

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Dave Patterson
Liberty Nation

The House Foreign Affairs Committee (HFAC) released its long-awaited final report on the Biden-Harris planning and management of the chaotic 2021 Afghanistan withdrawal. It isn’t pretty. Though the timeframe for the US departure from Afghanistan after 20 years of conflict encompassed several presidential administrations, the failure of leadership, decision-making, and operational execution was wholly that of the Biden-Harris administration. The public hearings, transcribed interviews, and document discovery dispute any attempt to place the blame elsewhere.

Evaluation of Afghanistan Retreat

For the past two years, the HFAC has been tireless in its efforts to find out just what happened in the waning days of summer 2021 when the Biden-Harris administration withdrew American citizens, military forces, civilians, diplomats, and friendly Afghan refugees. The HFAC’s research and conclusions in its blistering report, “Willful Blindness: An Assessment of the Biden-Harris Administration’s Withdrawal From Afghanistan and the Chaos That Followed,” are unsurprising for those who followed the numerous hearings. These insights from the assessment’s executive summary are typical of the critical findings. It is a sobering story of the Biden-Harris administration’s haphazard, bumbling, and dismissive attitude toward the safety of US personnel as it scrambled to get out of Afghanistan. The report explains:

The Biden-Harris administration was determined to withdraw from Afghanistan, with or without the Doha Agreement and no matter the cost … The Biden-Harris administration prioritized the optics of the withdrawal over the security of the US personnel on the ground … In the aftermath of the withdrawal, US national security was degraded as Afghanistan once again became a haven for terrorists … America’s credibility on the world stage was severely damaged after we abandoned Afghan allies to Taliban reprisal killings – the people of Afghanistan we had promised to protect.

Among the disturbing findings was the revelation that the “Biden-Harris administration misled and, in some instances, directly lied to the American people at every stage of the withdrawal, from the go-to-zero order until today.” Pulling no punches, the report calls out National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan as the “source of the majority of that misinformation campaign.”

The assessment said the “Biden-Harris administration’s failure to prepare for a NEO [non-combatant emergency evacuation] and order a timely NEO created an unsafe environment at HKIA [Hamid Karzai International Airport], exposing US Defense Department and State Department personnel to lethal threats and emotional harm.” As a result, poor planning and failure to secure the international airport led directly to the deaths of 13 US servicemembers, “murdered by a terrorist attack on August 26, 2021.”

As one might expect, within moments of the release of the report, Biden-Harris administration defenders were out in force. The White House dispatched National Security Council spokesman John Kirby, who started by blaming the former Trump administration for setting in motion the collapse of the Afghan government. “The Trump administration cut a deal called the Doha Agreement that mandated a complete US withdrawal from Afghanistan, and, yes, that included Bagram Air Base by the end of May 2021,” Kirby told reporters. This statement by Kirby was designed to absolve the Biden-Harris administration from its disastrous retreat out of HKIA. It was Trump’s fault because the Biden-Harris administration was duty-bound to follow the former president’s plan for withdrawal no matter the cost. A closer look at the HFAC assessment of what actually happened belies this notion.

Trump Was Not President During Chaotic Withdrawal

The Trump administration did not remove US combat forces before an NEO operation; the Biden-Harris administration did. (Page 64)

The Trump administration did not take away air support for the Afghanistan security forces; the Biden-Harris administration did. (Page 65)

The Trump administration did not initially set Sept 11, 2021, as the date by which all US personnel would be out of Afghanistan, and then move the date up to Aug 31 because the political motivation for the original date was too cute by half; the Biden-Harris administration did. (Page 57)

The Trump administration did not refuse the Taliban’s offer to allow US military forces to secure Kabul during the retreat, as Gen Frank McKenzie told the House Armed Services Committee on Sep 29, 2021, and reported in the Hill; the Biden-Harris administration did.

The Trump administration did not desert Bagram Air Base, a much more defensible air base for getting out of Kabul than HKIA; the Biden-Harris administration did. (Page 152)

The Trump administration did not choose to evacuate all Americans and friendly Afghans from HKIA without adequate defenses and, in so doing, enable a suicide bomber to murder 13 young American servicemembers, injure 45 US servicemembers, and kill 170 Afghan civilians; the Biden-Harris administration did. (Page 152)

The Trump administration did not mistakenly authorize an air strike to kill an innocent aid worker and his family; the Biden-Harris administration did. (Page 27)

The Trump administration did not disregard NATO allies’ recommendation against the “go-to-zero” order; the Biden-Harris administration did. (Page 186)

During a Pentagon press briefing following the release of the HFAC Afghanistan report, Maj Gen. Patrick Ryder, the Defense Department press secretary, was asked whether the criticisms were “that the US prioritized the withdrawal over the safety of US personnel and did not adequately prepare for a NEO.” Ryder danced around the question with a variety of non-sequiturs, but, to his credit, he did not deny the allegations.

The stain of the Biden-Harris administration’s catastrophic decision-making and failure to adequately adjust its planning to address a rapidly changing Taliban takeover of Afghanistan is and will continue to be a shameful legacy. Many of the geopolitical conundrums the United States now faces are the direct result of the lasting impression the Biden-Harris administration left of indecision, bad planning, and disastrously poor execution. It is a shadow over America that will take time and leadership light to remove.

The views expressed are those of the author and not of any other affiliate.

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This article was originally published by Liberty Nation News.

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