There was a curious moment on CBS’s “Face the Nation” yesterday in which Major Garrett asked Nikki Haley whether the Trump administration’s 2020 deal with the Taliban “set in motion what we’re seeing now” in Afghanistan. The former ambassador to the United Nations apparently didn’t like the question.
“You know, I think everybody’s wanting to go back and talk about Trump,” Haley said, quickly changing the subject in her next breath.
As regular readers know, one my favorite scenes in Monty Python and the Holy Grail is the one in which John Cleese’s Sir Lancelot, certain he’s doing the right thing on behalf of a damsel in distress, storms into a castle during a wedding party, indiscriminately slaughtering most of the guests with his sword. The castle owner, eager to curry favor with Lancelot, urges the survivors to let bygones be bygones.
“Let’s not bicker and argue about who killed whom,” he tells his few remaining guests.
The scene came to mind watching Haley avoid an important line of inquiry. Asked about the Trump administration’s policy toward Afghanistan — after playing an integral role on Donald Trump’s foreign policy team — the South Carolina Republican effectively said, “Let’s not bicker and argue about which administration struck a bad deal with the Taliban, laying the groundwork for future disasters.”
Whether Haley wants to avoid the subject or not, the relevance of the Trump administration’s February 2020 agreement with the Taliban is unmistakable — and the former ambassador isn’t the only member of the former president’s team who isn’t at all sure what to say about it.
For those who might benefit from a refresher, the Washington Post published a good summary last week, recapping the basic elements of the deal:
[I]n February 2020, Trump announced that there was a deal. The basic contours: The United States was to get out of Afghanistan in 14 months and, in exchange, the Taliban agreed not to let Afghanistan become a haven for terrorists. The Taliban also agreed to start peace talks with the Afghan government and consider a cease-fire with the government.
Trump, desperate to withdraw, dispatched then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to reach an agreement with Abdul Ghani Baradar, a Taliban co-founder the Republican administration helped free from a Pakistani prison. Soon after, the then-U.S. president used the agreement to intensify his drawdown of troops in Afghanistan ahead of his departure from the White House.
The deal’s flaws, however, weren’t subtle: it set vague goals for the Taliban, with little in the way of enforcement mechanisms. After Trump’s electoral defeat, the agreement also left his successor with the untenable choice of a messy, chaotic withdrawal or a military escalation.








