U.S. adversaries could exploit former Afghan commandos - U.S. Republican
report
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[August 15, 2022]
By Jonathan Landay
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former Afghan
security personnel with sensitive knowledge of U.S. operations left
behind by the American evacuation operation are vulnerable to
recruitment or coercion by Russia, China and Iran, Republican lawmakers
said on Sunday, noting that President Joe Biden's administration failed
to prioritize evacuating them.
"This is especially true given reports that some former Afghan military
personnel have fled to Iran," minority Republicans of the U.S. House
Foreign Affairs Committee said in a report on the first anniversary of
the Taliban takeover of Kabul.
The Biden administration, the report said, failed to prioritize
evacuating U.S.-trained Afghan commandos and other elite units in the
shambolic Aug. 14-30, 2021, U.S. troop pullout and evacuation operation
at Kabul international airport.
Thirteen U.S. soldiers died and hundreds of U.S. citizens and tens of
thousands of at-risk Afghans were left behind during the operation.
The administration calls the operation an "extraordinary success" that
flew more than 124,000 Americans and Afghans to safety and wound up an
"endless" war in which some 3,500 U.S. and allied troops, and hundreds
of thousands of Afghans died.
But hundreds of U.S.-trained commandos and other former security
personnel and their families remain in Afghanistan amid reports the
Taliban have been killing and torturing former Afghan officials,
allegations the militants deny.
Those former personnel "could be recruited or coerced into working for
one of America’s adversaries that maintains a presence in Afghanistan,
including Russia, China, or Iran," the Republican report said.
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Afghan Commando forces armoured convoy
leaves toward the front line, at the Ghorband District, Parwan
Province, Afghanistan June 29, 2021. REUTERS/Omar Sobhani
It called that possibility a "major national security risk" because
those Afghans "know the U.S. military and intelligence community's
tactics, techniques, and procedures."
Some U.S. officials and experts say Biden has sought to move on from
Afghanistan without properly assessing the war's lessons and without
accountability for the chaotic evacuation.
The Republican report wedded new details of the extraction operation
with congressional testimony and military and news reports to show
how the administration overrode U.S. commanders' advice, failed to
adequately plan and disregarded the Taliban's violations of a 2020
pullout deal.
In another finding, it said the administration waited until hours
before the Taliban seized Kabul to make key evacuation decisions.
They included asking other countries to host transit centers for
thousands of Afghan evacuees who worked for the U.S. government
during the 20-year American intervention and others at risk of
Taliban retribution, said the report.
"Very little was done to prepare for a Taliban takeover of the
country" or for the evacuation, it said.
(Reporting by Jonathan Landay; Editing by David Gregorio)
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