'Was it worth it?': Pain and anger inside Pentagon after Afghanistan
crumbles
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[August 24, 2021]
By Idrees Ali
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - On the second floor
of the Pentagon, a small map marks the path that a hijacked American
Airlines plane took before hitting the military headquarters on Sept. 11
2001, an attack that propelled the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan.
A few corridors over hangs a full wall-sized poster of a 2009 Time
magazine cover, with the words "How not to lose in Afghanistan" and an
image of a U.S. soldier smoking a cigarette somewhere in the country.
The building near Washington that houses offices for more than 20,000
service members and civilian defense employees, is littered with
reminders of 20 years of U.S. involvement in Afghanistan, America's
longest war.
Was it all worth it? - That's a question senior military leaders are
grappling with following the collapse of the U.S.-trained and funded
Afghan military, the Taliban's shockingly rapid takeover, a bungled
evacuation of civilians from Kabul and the prospect of Afghans who
helped Americans in the war being left behind to face reprisals from the
Islamist militants in power.
"We see videos and photos, we read stories that bring back memories for
some of us, and it becomes intensely personal," General David Berger,
the commandant of the Marine Corps, wrote in a memo to Marines.
"Was it worth it? Yes. Does it still hurt? Yes," Berger wrote.
'DIDN'T HAVE TO END LIKE THIS'
It is common for service members to form bonds with the countries they
deploy to, especially in combat.
There was deep frustration among service members deployed to Syria when
then-President Donald Trump in December 2018 abruptly announced the
withdrawal of 2,000 troops who had largely defeated Islamic State
(ISIS). The move was criticized by officers and lawmakers as abandonment
of Kurdish allies and leaving unchecked Russia and Iran's influence in
Syria.
But unlike Syria, a generation of service members were shaped by
Afghanistan, a war at first intended to oust the Taliban and target al
Qaeda militants there who planned the attacks on New York and
Washington.
Over the years, 800,000 Americans deployed to Afghanistan as the mission
developed into a nation-building exercise. Nearly 2,400 were killed and
more than 20,000 injured.
To critics, the U.S. military was part of the problem. Senior military
leaders have often presented overly-optimistic views. U.S. airstrikes
and raids killed women and children.
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A U.S. Marine provides a meal ready-to-eat to a child during an
evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul,
Afghanistan, August 21, 2021. Picture taken August 21, 2021. U.S.
Marine Corps/Sgt. Samuel Ruiz/Handout via REUTERS
As intelligence reports started trickling in two
weeks ago that the Taliban were sweeping through the country with
little resistance by the Afghan forces, Pentagon officials said they
were shocked.
When President Joe Biden gave a speech in which he said some at-risk
Afghans did not want to leave, there was anger over his perceived
lack of empathy.
In the past few days, there has been frustration over the slow pace
of the evacuations of U.S. citizens and vulnerable Afghans.
U.S. military officials said they were unable to hold back tears
during the past week.
For some, it was reading reports about the bases they lived in being
overrun. For others it was receiving messages from Afghans, begging
for help and warning that the Taliban would kill them.
"I want to be very clear: your service was not in vain, and it made
a difference," Admiral Mike Gilday, the chief of U.S. Naval
operations, said in his own memo last week.
Aides to U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley, who both served in
Afghanistan, included references to the range of emotions service
members were feeling when they spoke to reporters.
Both said they understood that the events in Afghanistan were
personal for service members and these were difficult times.
"It was going to end sometime. It just didn't have to end like
this," one military official said.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by Mary Milliken and Grant McCool)
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