Afghan army collapse 'took us all by surprise,' U.S. defense secretary
says
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[September 29, 2021]
By Phil Stewart and Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin told Congress on Tuesday that the Afghan army's
sudden collapse caught the Pentagon "by surprise," as military leaders
confronted a contentious Senate hearing about how and why America lost
its longest war.
Republican lawmakers accused President Joe Biden of lying about
recommendations from his military that some troops should be kept in
Afghanistan. Even Biden's Democrats expressed frustration with a chaotic
withdrawal that left U.S. troops dead and American citizens behind.
Biden's approval ratings have been badly damaged by last month's
spectacular collapse of the two-decade war effort, with painful images
of Afghans clinging desperately to a U.S. military plane as they tried
to escape Taliban rule.
Thirteen U.S. troops also died in an Aug. 26 suicide bombing trying to
safeguard the evacuation effort that, ultimately, relied on support from
the militant Islamist Taliban, a long-time U.S. foe.
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General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and General
Frank McKenzie of U.S. Central Command also acknowledged being caught
off-guard by the speed of the Taliban takeover and collapse of the
U.S.-backed government in Kabul.
It was their first public congressional testimony since the Taliban won
the war in August.
"The fact that the Afghan army we and our partners trained simply melted
away – in many cases without firing a shot – took us all by surprise,"
Austin, a former four-star general who served in Afghanistan, told the
Senate Armed Services Committee.
"It would be dishonest to claim otherwise."
McKenzie and Milley testified that they had believed it would have been
best to keep a minimum of 2,500 troops in the country. In an August
interview, Biden denied his commanders had recommended that, saying:
"No. No one said that to me that I can recall."
Republican Senator Joni Ernst said Biden's decision to keep former
President Donald Trump's unconditional withdrawal agreement with the
Taliban had squandered U.S. sacrifices for what he thought would be "a
cheap political victory."
"The loss of our service members, and abandonment of Americans and
Afghan allies last month was an unforced, disgraceful humiliation that
didn't have to happen," Ernst said.
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Senator James Inhofe, the panel's top Republican, described it as a
"horror of the president's own making."
White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Biden's military experts had
provided "a range of viewpoints" about Afghanistan, and that Biden
believed leaving troops there would "mean war with the Taliban."
Milley, the top U.S. military officer, noted military warnings since
late 2020 that an accelerated, unconditional withdrawal could
precipitate the collapse of the Afghan military and government.
"That was a year ago. My assessment remained consistent throughout,"
Milley said.
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U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Tuesday told a U.S. Senate
panel that the Afghan army's sudden collapse caught the Pentagon
off-guard as he acknowledged miscalculations in America's longest
war.
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'WHY DON'T YOU RESIGN?'
Republican Senator Tom Cotton asked Milley why, if everything he
said was true, he didn't resign his position.
Milley pushed back strongly, saying a U.S. president does not have
to agree with the advice of his generals. "This country doesn't want
generals figuring out what orders we are going to accept and do or
not. That's not our job," Milley said.
Austin, Milley and senators - many of whom oversaw the war effort
for years - seemed full of questions about what went wrong, citing
failures to appreciate the impact of corruption and damaged morale
in the ranks.
"There's a series of strategic lessons to be learned," Milley said.
Democrats faulted Republicans for blaming Biden, who has been
president since January, for everything that went wrong during the
20 years U.S. troops have been in Afghanistan, including under
Trump.
"Anyone who says the last few months were a failure, but everything
before that was great, clearly hasn't been paying attention,"
Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren said.
Much of the hearing was devoted to Republicans' questions about
Milley's interviews with Bob Woodward and other reporters for books
on the chaotic last months the former president was in the White
House.
Austin praised U.S. personnel who helped airlift 124,000 people out
of the country.
But Milley acknowledged that while the evacuation effort was a
logistical accomplishment, the withdrawal was a "strategic defeat"
that left the Taliban back in power.
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He warned the Taliban "remains a terrorist organization" which has
not broken ties with al Qaeda.
A reconstituted al Qaeda in Afghanistan with aspirations to attack
the United States was "a very real possibility" - perhaps in as
little as a year, he said.
That warning is likely to unsettle lawmakers, who are skeptical of
the Pentagon's ability to quickly respond to al Qaeda and Islamic
State threats.
Austin defended plans to address future counterterrorism threats
from overseas after a botched drone strike killed 10 Afghan
civilians last month.
"Over-the-horizon operations are difficult but absolutely possible.
And the intelligence that supports them comes from a variety of
sources, not just U.S. boots on the ground," Austin said.
(Reporting by Phil Stewart and Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Giles
Elgood and Rosalba O'Brien)
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