Analysis-Biden lost faith in the U.S. mission in Afghanistan over a
decade ago
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[July 09, 2021]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe
Biden's frustrations with Afghanistan boiled over more than a decade
ago, and they never again eased.
On a trip to Kabul in January 2009, shortly before he was sworn in as
vice president, Biden warned Afghanistan's then-President Hamid Karzai
at a dinner that he could lose Washington's support unless he started
governing for all Afghans, hinting at corruption allegations targeting
Karzai's brother.
Karzai shot back that the United States was indifferent to the deaths of
Afghan civilians.
As the dispute went on, Biden threw down his napkin and the dinner ended
abruptly, according to several people in attendance.
Biden had previously supported strong military and humanitarian efforts
to rebuild Afghanistan after the United States toppled the Islamist
militant Taliban government in retaliation for its aiding al Qaeda
leader Osama bin Laden, the mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on
the United States.
But the clash with Karzai and the rest of a discomforting trip left
Biden filled with a sense that Afghanistan's war was ensnaring
Washington and could be unwinnable.
He returned to Washington with a stern warning to President-elect Barack
Obama: Now is not the time to put more troops in Afghanistan.
"It wasn't simply impatience," said Jonah Blank, a longtime former Biden
aide who was with him on the 2009 trip. "Year after year, his optimism
started to drain away."
Biden lost that policy dispute as Obama eventually ordered a surge of
new troops into Afghanistan and extended the war through his term in
office, which ended in 2017.
But Biden is now in charge at the White House and he is overseeing a
near-total troop withdrawal despite the objections of some military
experts, Democratic and Republican lawmakers and humanitarian officials.
Biden's Republican predecessor, Donald Trump, struck a deal with the
Taliban under which all U.S. troops would leave by May of this year.
Sources say Biden worried that reneging on that deal would court further
attacks on U.S. troops and extend the war.
Biden acknowledged on Thursday that a new civil war could erupt in
Afghanistan, but reiterated his commitment to pulling out U.S. troops.
While the United States will maintain diplomatic and humanitarian
support for Afghans, Biden said their future was up to them.
It was the Democratic president's most public effort yet to reassure
Americans on the Afghanistan strategy as the Taliban takes over swaths
of a country at the precipice of chaos.
"I made the decision with clear eyes," Biden said. "I will not send
another generation of Americans to war in Afghanistan with no reasonable
expectation of achieving a different outcome."
About 2,400 U.S. service members have been killed in America's longest
war - and many thousands more wounded.
A majority of Americans support Biden's decision to move troops out of
Afghanistan, according to an Ipsos poll from April, but only 28% of
respondents agreed the United States accomplished its goals in
Afghanistan, while 43% said the U.S. withdrawal now helps al Qaeda.
NO GUARANTEES
Critics, including some U.S. government officials, warn the withdrawal
is occurring without guarantees that the Taliban will participate in a
peace process or democratic elections, or cut ties with al Qaeda.
The Pentagon says the withdrawal of U.S. forces is 90% complete, and the
Taliban has launched an offensive taking areas where it had once been
kept at bay. On Thursday, it captured a major border crossing with Iran.
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President Joe Biden meets with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani at the
White House, in Washington, U.S., June 25, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst/File Photo
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who accompanied
Biden on the 2009 Afghanistan trip, said this week that al Qaeda
could re-emerge in Afghanistan and lay the groundwork for another
attack on the United States. "It is not in America's national
security interest for the Taliban to take over Afghanistan."
Senator Jeanne Shaheen, a Democrat, said she is
"deeply concerned" by conditions in Afghanistan.
Heather Barr, an interim co-director of the women's rights division
at Human Rights Watch who spent years in Afghanistan, also had a
grim assessment: "It feels like a complete disaster, as if the
country is collapsing."
The decision to leave was not easy, but current and former aides
said Biden's concerns about getting bogged down in Afghanistan began
in the final stages of the George W. Bush administration and
crystalized over the years.
The 2009 trip persuaded him that the policy was failing.
"What he saw and heard on the trip," Obama wrote in his 2020 memoir,
"A Promised Land," "convinced him that we needed to rethink our
entire approach" and that Afghanistan was a "dangerous quagmire."
Biden was sometimes the only senior White House official opposing
troop surges to back the counterinsurgency strategy.
Yet the years that passed only sharpened Biden's concerns and those
of close aides, including Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
The 2011 killing of bin Laden, in a U.S. raid that Biden was
skeptical of in neighboring Pakistan, was a major accomplishment for
Obama. But it also removed another reason for the United States to
maintain a strong presence in the region.
"Biden argued throughout the process, and would continue to argue,
that the war was politically unsustainable at home," Robert Gates, a
defense secretary under Obama who clashed with Biden, said in a 2014
memoir.
Biden's administration hopes it can maintain some leverage over the
Taliban in U.S.-backed peace talks with threats to withhold
financial assistance that the poor, landlocked country needs.
Yet the swift exit risks giving the Taliban free rein. Blinken told
Reuters during the 2020 presidential campaign that Trump's mistake
was agreeing to leave Afghanistan while extracting nothing in return
from the Taliban.
"We better make sure that we say we're drawing down but in exchange
for actions from the Taliban that we're seeking as opposed to
pulling out for nothing in return."
A bipartisan group of lawmakers and aid groups share the concern
that Biden's own approach now is insufficient.
"Every time I've asked the administration for their plan on any of
these issues, I'm told: 'It's coming,'" said Republican
Representative Mike Rogers, his party's senior member on the House
Armed Services Committee. "These poor decisions, I'm afraid, will
require our return to Afghanistan in the near future."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional reporting by Steve
Holland and Jonathan Landay; Editing by Kieran Murray and Peter
Cooney)
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