“While we’re ripping apart these three gentlemen here I want to remind everybody that the decision the President made was to stop fighting a war that after 20 years it was proven we could not win. There was no easy way to do that,” the committee’s chairman,Democrat Adam Smith,told his colleagues,accusing them of “partisan political opportunism”.
From left,US General Mark Milley,Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin and Marine Corps General Kenneth McKenzie testify before the House Armed Services Committee on Wednesday.Credit:Bloomberg
Several Republicans accused Biden of lying to the public about the advice military leaders provided him concerning the withdrawal.
Milley and McKenzie have told Congress members they had advised both Biden and his predecessor to keep at least 2500 troops in Afghanistan,emphasising their belief that a reduction below that number would precipitate the eventual collapse of Afghanistan’s government and military.
At the outset of the session,Alabama Mike Rogers,the panel’s top Republican,accused the White House of allowing the State Department to determine the US military posture in Afghanistan.
“We have to admit this was the State Department and the White House that cause this catastrophe,not the Defence Department,” Rogers argued,claiming the withdrawal “will go down in history as one of the greatest failures of American leadership”.
Chaos on the tarmac:hundreds of people run alongside a US Air Force C-17 transport plane as it moves down a runway in Kabul after the city fell to the Taliban.Credit:AP
As they did in the Senate a day prior,the military leaders defended Biden’s right as the civilian commander-in-chief to disagree with their recommendations. Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin told the hearing he did “support the President’s decision to end the war in Afghanistan” and that he “did not support staying there forever”.
Yet all three acknowledged that the Afghan government’s collapse – and that of the Afghan security forces – occurred much faster than the Defence Department had predicted. “I did not see it coming as fast as it did,” McKenzie said. “I thought it would be a matter of into the[northern] fall or into the winter. I did not see it happening in 11 days in August.”
Lawmakers repeatedly referenced an August interview Biden gave to ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos,in which the President said his military advisers were “split” over whether to keep troops in Afghanistan – and then said no military advisers told him that he could “just keep 2500 troops” in the country.
‘I did not see it coming as fast as it did.’
General Kenneth McKenzie,US Central Command commander
“Either the President lied to the American people or he legitimately cannot remember the counsel of his top military advisers,” Republican Mike Johnson,said,reading from a transcript of Biden’s interview. “Which is it?”
The military leaders refused to detail the advice they gave the President,and Austin told Johnson that he considered his question “inappropriate”.
Democrats on the committee took umbrage at such criticism,arguing Biden never said that military leaders had not recommended leaving some US troops on the ground. “What he said was,none of them said that we could do it in a stable,peaceful environment,” Smith said. “And that is the key point.”
Leaving US troops in Afghanistan “would have been putting American lives at risk for a mission that we had to know was not achievable,” Smith said. “The President made the right call on that.”
Milley told senators on Tuesday there was “near certainty” of additional attacks on US troops and “significant casualties” had the military tried to stay beyond the August 31 deadline. Remaining into September,the general said,would have required committing up to 25,000 additional personnel to reopen abandoned bases and retake Kabul,which by that time was being patrolled by an estimated 6000 Taliban fighters.
Loading
Still uncertain is the future of US counter-terrorism operations in Afghanistan. Austin,Milley and McKenzie acknowledged that so-called “over-the-horizon” capabilities are not as reliable as on-the-ground intelligence.
The conditions created by Taliban rule would “more likely than not” allow for the reemergence of al-Qaeda and the Islamic State’s affiliate in Afghanistan,Milley said,noting the Defence Department would watch for signs of that happening. But “it will take time to develop a true intel picture,” Austin noted.
The Washington Post