According to reporting from Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Robert Costa in their new book, “Peril,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken did his best to prevent the disaster over which the Biden administration presided in Afghanistan. Despite his early misgivings, America’s chief diplomat has since become a full-throated advocate for President Joe Biden’s patently calamitous Afghan policy. But in defending the indefensible, Blinken is sacrificing his reputation and tarnishing the administration he serves.
Blinken has the unenviable task of selling the American public on the necessity — indeed, inevitability — of the humiliating spectacle they were forced to witness in August.
Following a meeting with his counterparts from NATO nations in March, Blinken reportedly abandoned his support for a full withdrawal of U.S. troops from Central Asia. “His new recommendation was to extend the mission with U.S. troops for a while to see if it could yield a political settlement,” Woodward and Costa allege in their book. America’s allies were near unanimous in their belief that the United States should leverage its power to secure concessions from the Taliban and influence the formation of an interim government before leaving Afghanistan, and Blinken agreed. But Biden overruled him.
Now, Blinken has the unenviable task of selling the American public on the necessity — indeed, inevitability — of the humiliating spectacle they were forced to witness in August. That helps to explain why he’s turned in such an unconvincing performance.
“In April, we began drawing down our embassy, ordering nonessential personnel to depart,” Blinken said in testimony before members of Congress this week. This, along with the “19 specific messages” his State Department sent warning U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents to leave Afghanistan beginning in March, advances a craven claim: the suggestion that the estimated hundreds of U.S. citizens and permanent residents America left behind in Afghanistan have no one to blame but themselves.
But the administration spoke out of both sides of its mouth. As late as the first weeks of July, the president insisted that the “likelihood that there’s going to be a Taliban overrunning everything and owning the whole country is highly unlikely.” Meanwhile, the State Department-run embassy in Kabul assured those who depended on its services that the mission was “open and will remain open.” Moreover, the facility “has well-developed security plans to safely protect our personnel and facilities.” American citizens, permanent residents, and wartime allies are not at fault because they failed to understand these assurances were hollow.
“That emergency evacuation was sparked by the collapse of the Afghan security forces and government,” Blinken continued. “Even the most pessimistic assessments did not predict that government forces in Kabul would collapse while U.S. forces remained.” This doesn’t exculpate the Biden administration so much as indict it. If the administration’s intelligence assessments (which grew rapidly bleaker in July) indicated that Afghan forces could hold out against the Taliban offensive that had begun that spring with only approximately 700 U.S. troops remaining on the ground and without the American air, intelligence, and logistical support they’d come to rely upon, that is evidence of an incredible failure of imagination.
American citizens, permanent residents, and wartime allies are not at fault because they failed to understand these assurances were hollow.
But that’s the past. On Aug. 31, “The military mission in Afghanistan officially ended,” Blinken said, “and a new diplomatic mission began.” Beyond exfiltrating the many thousands of Americans, legal residents and wartime allies we left behind, that mission is focused on preventing Afghanistan from becoming an exporter of transnational Islamist terrorism again.
Toward that end, the Taliban have suddenly become our invaluable partners. “The Taliban has committed to prevent terrorist groups from using Afghanistan as a base for external operations that could threaten the United States or our allies, including Al Qaeda and ISIS-K,” the secretary of state declared.
This claim not only conflicts with the evidence of your own eyes but the Biden administration’s own assessments. “We are already beginning to see some of the indications of some potential movement of al Qaeda to Afghanistan,” Deputy CIA Director David Cohen testified in his own appearance before Congress on Tuesday. And the Taliban isn’t getting the band back together for the nostalgia value alone. “The current assessment probably conservatively is one to two years for Al Qaeda to build some capability to at least threaten the homeland,” Defense Intelligence Agency Director Scott Berrier agreed.
These assessments comport with the conclusion reached by Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley that the Taliban’s reconquest of Afghanistan accelerates the threat to the U.S. homeland posed by terrorist actors in Central Asia. And it dovetails with the views of Barack Obama’s former intelligence chiefs.
“The reconstruction of Al Qaeda’s homeland attack capability will happen quickly, in less than a year, if the U.S. does not collect the intelligence and take the military action to prevent it,” former CIA Director Mike Morell warned. Leon Panetta agreed. The Taliban is “going to continue to support Al Qaeda,” he said, and “they will plan additional attacks on our country, as well as elsewhere.”








