By Kyle Smith
Monday, August
16, 2021
After President Biden’s now-notorious
Afghanistan speech on July 8, a reporter said to the president, “Your own intelligence community has
assessed that the Afghan government will likely collapse.” Biden replied to
this statement, which was not only true but
obvious, “That is not true.” The spooks said in
June that Afghanistan would probably be lost in six months, proving to be about
four and a half months too optimistic, but as the Taliban roared through the
country early this summer, Biden blithely and stupidly averred, “The likelihood
there’s going to be the Taliban overrunning everything and owning the whole
country is highly unlikely.”
Remember when the press spent an entire
week in a lather about President Trump’s lies about the size of his
inauguration crowd? How should we react to far more consequential lies, lies
that result in the mass rape of little girls and the mass torture and
beheadings of men? How many will point out that Biden’s vow to restore
America’s international reputation is in tatters, not even seven months into
his administration?
Trump’s asking a question about whether
disinfectants could be used inside the body to fight COVID — an off-the-cuff
musing taken seriously by no one — was taken as a suggestion to “inject
bleach,” though what he said was, “And is there a way we can do something like
that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning . . . so it’d be interesting to
check that.” This is generally held up as the single stupidest thing Trump ever
said. Compare that to Biden’s assertion, just five weeks before Afghanistan
fell, that the results of his actions would have no parallel— “none whatsoever”
— with the collapse of South Vietnam, which took two years. “None whatsoever.
Zero. What you had is — you had entire brigades breaking through the gates of
our embassy — six, if I’m not mistaken,” Biden continued, nonsensically, about
Saigon, as though the Taliban was not about to stage a rerun of 1975.
“The Taliban is not the south — the North
Vietnamese army. They’re not — they’re not remotely comparable in terms of
capability. There’s going to be no circumstance where you see people being
lifted off the roof of a embassy in the — of the United States from
Afghanistan. It is not at all comparable,” Biden went on.
In the previous administration, the press
spent four years in four-mode discussing each one of Trump’s insults, his
boasts, and his mostly trivial and silly falsehoods. Biden’s staggering
combination of dishonesty, incompetence, arrogance, intransigence, ignorance,
and dereliction of duty has already had far more devastating effects than four
years of Trump’s slipshod leadership. Those who wondered whether an outwardly
stable and calm president would necessarily prove to be a wiser manager than an
unstable and erratic one have their answer.
Biden in June rejected suggestions that he
slow the pace of withdrawal and maintain the air base north of Kabul to
facilitate a more orderly exit, the Wall Street Journal reported,
noting also that Biden had failed at that point to approve a detailed plan for
evacuating the tens of thousands of Afghans who risked their lives working in
close support of the U.S. military. In the coming weeks, we will learn more
about how much misery Biden caused by yanking out U.S. troops as precipitously
as an impatient toddler flipping over a checkerboard. Biden himself, as a
senior senator, voted for the invasion of Afghanistan, on September 14, 2001,
but this year, Biden decided he was bored with Afghanistan and so Afghans must
suffer and perish for his impatience.
Top military advisers were pleading with Biden to understand that just a minimal presence — say, 3,000
troops in Afghanistan — would go a long way toward maintaining a fragile peace.
Biden rejected this out of hand: “There would be no conditions put on the
withdrawal, Mr. Biden told the men,” the New York Times reported.
That entailed “cutting off the last thread — one that had worked with Mr. Trump
— and that [Secretary of Defense Lloyd] Austin and [Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs] General Milley hoped could stave off a full drawdown.” Referring,
apparently, to the Fall of Saigon, Austin’s warning to the president that,
“We’ve seen this movie before,” fell on Biden’s deaf ears.
The U.S. hasn’t just lost in Afghanistan,
we have been humiliated. But our humiliation is less important than the fate of
our Afghan allies left behind. Deserting them, President Biden has also handed
their tormentors our equipment and weapons. Rape, torture, and murder on a
gigantic scale await. All of it can be tied directly to Biden. On this issue
and this issue only, the president claims he is bound by his predecessor’s
policy. The Paris Climate Accord? The Keystone Pipeline? The Iran Deal? In all
of these cases, Biden promised to reverse Trump.
The Democrats love to tell us that they
are the party of “empathy.” Yet where is the evidence that they possess even a
modicum of ordinary sympathy for Afghanistan? As an entire country descends
into chaos and suffering, the Biden-Harris response is a shrug of total
indifference. Hey, good thing we elected the first woman vice president, one
who promised to use the gift of her empathy to focus extra attention to the
world’s women and girls.
We can never know exactly what President
Trump would have done in Afghanistan; at many junctures of his presidency, he
seemed simply unable to overrule his supposed subordinates, though in some
cases heeding their counsel was the wiser choice anyway. But a theoretical poor
plan by Trump to exit Afghanistan in an alternate reality has to be measured
against the real, actual catastrophe caused by Biden: a heedless scramble for the
exits so hasty that our former allies will forever curse our name. Or maybe
just one name. Who lost Afghanistan? Joe Biden lost Afghanistan.
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