Someone once said,
“There is never a wrong time to do the right thing”. I have a feeling that
phrase might run through President Biden’s mind his week. Leaving Afghanistan
was not supposed to be this difficult. And – it was the right step.
·
The American Embassy was supposed to have more time to process visas for those special interpreters
and aides to the Americans.
·
The
Afghan army was supposed to offer some opposition to the Taliban; the Taliban
was not supposed to race through the provinces like General Sherman across the
South.
·
The
Afghan president was not supposed to leave the country as the Taliban approached
Kabul.
·
As
American and NATO forces pulled out there appeared to be a vacuum that
facilitated the advance of the Taliban army.
However, all of
those things happened and greatly complicated the evacuation of Americans and
Afghan citizens who helped American troops. It turned out that the only escape option
was a single airport in Kabul, which was being guarded by hostile Taliban forces
and secured by the Americans. Many advisors had predicted that it would take at
least a year to eighteen months for the opposition to advance to Kabul. So, because
of the failure of this planning, American military forces had to again be sent
to Kabul to protect the evacuation. Over 6000 American troops are now facilitating
this evacuation. Subsequently, the forces airlifted embassy personnel to the
airport by helicopter.
The military
troops have now flown thousands of people out of Afghanistan; thousands more
are waiting, some at the airport, others in severe crushes of humanity outside
the gates under a blazing sun and high temperatures. Afghan children and the
elderly became dehydrated. The crush of the crowds as they surged toward the
airport gate trampled some who stood in wait and took the life of a two-year-old
child who fell beneath the hordes. Her mother survived but left her post to
bury her child. This so should not be happening. This was not the intent of the
president as he ordered troops home from a twenty-year war. Where did all of
this go wrong?
In an address
to the nation today, President
Biden indicated that over 28,000 people have been evacuated from
Afghanistan to date. He stated that the evacuations will continue past the August
31st deadline if necessary. Some talks are going on with the Taliban
to possibly extend the flights past the August 31st negotiated deadline.
Other reports note that the Taliban will not move into full control of the city
until the Americans leave. Many residents report that the Taliban are already
going door-to-door looking for weapons and following lists of former government
employees. Additional reports indicate fears that reprisals will begin soon and
desperation is increasing across the city, especially among women who believe
they will no longer be allowed to work or attend school, despite Taliban claims
to the contrary.
In the New York
Times today, Adam
Nossiter analyzed the Afghan war and Americas’ participation in that war.
He indicated that the war the Americans thought they were fighting against the
Taliban was not the one their Afghan allies were fighting. He believed this
difference changed the effort into a neo-colonial adventure that was doomed from
the start. The Taliban members were from the local tribes and villages and to
many, their repressions were not considered out of order. Americans are
horrified about the whipping of women and denial of their rights, but to many
in remote villages, this was customary and supported. So, while women in Kabul
made inroads against these traditional customs, those far from the capital did
not agree. America could not build a society that resisted change.
Another
perspective was noted today in an op-ed
in the Washington Post. In this piece, a retired veteran military officer, who
had been gravely wounded in Afghanistan, supported the withdrawal and the
presidents’ decision. Dan Berchinski noted America could not outlast the
Taliban. He indicated that once the mission changed from fighting terrorists to
nation-building; we had lost whatever advantage we might have held over the
Taliban. Although he is angry that he and others gave up limbs and lives for
this effort, he faults the military for always predicting rosy outcomes despite
realities that showed otherwise. And, although he agrees with the exit
strategy, he also indicates that it should have been better managed. He also
states in part: “to cite the messiness of the withdrawal as
evidence that the war is worth continuing is shortsighted. Over the past several
days, veterans such as myself have been asked if our service was in vain. My
answer is that it won’t be if we draw the correct lesson from recent events and
recognize that heartbreaking news footage, as awful as it is, is no justification
for perpetuating an unwinnable war.”
Another opinion
also appearing in the Post was that of Fareed
Zakaria who after noting that over thirty meetings of the National Security
Council (NSC) were held in recent months to plan the withdrawal, indicated that
he thought the planning did not lead to an action plan, but perhaps memos about
one. He felt that maybe the NSC and the Pentagon have too many layers of
bureaucracy to affect a workable solution. Zakaria also cited the recent
Afghanistan Papers published by the Post which reported that the military would
give a sunny picture to the outsider, while to themselves, they spoke in less
certain terms and voiced skepticism. He concluded that success is still
possible if the administration stops meeting and starts doing.
I believe that
the President made the correct decision to end a war that we were not going to
ever win. I think the evacuation should have started sooner and that he should
not have deferred to the wishes of the Afghan President to delay those moves.
He obviously did not think that Kabul would fall to the Taliban so rapidly and
thought that there was more time to move people. Reports came out this week
that presidential aide Stephen
Miller in the previous administration deliberately complicated the
procedures which would have allowed our Afghan allies to get necessary permits
to come to America. That, in addition to the hollowing out of experienced
diplomats under both Secretaries of State Pompeo and Tillerson, made it
difficult for a truncated staff to efficiently function. I think most Americans
agree that we should try as much as possible to allow free passage to all of
our allies who need to leave. However, I regret that the rapid takeover will
keep many from outlying areas from navigating through dangerous checkpoints
manned by the Taliban to make it safely to Kabul and the airport. That rapid
collapse of the local military, which was not foreseen, was a serious
miscalculation.
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Currently, the Delta
variant continued its rapid swath across much of the South this past week as
cases rose across the nation. The CDC is close to getting FDA approval to add a
third vaccine or booster shot for many who are immunocompromised or over 65. Additionally, The World Health Organization begged developed nations to not give third shots
when much of the less developed world has yet to get even one vaccine dose. In Afghanistan,
it is estimated that approximately 2.4% are vaccinated, for example. That
country has reported more than 7,000 deaths and over 150,000 infections, according
to Reuters.
Some social scientists are concerned
about a wider gap between nations with vaccines and those without and the
possibility of even greater social upheaval due to the lack of adequate
healthcare infrastructure. Meanwhile, Governor DeSantis of Florida is
threatening local school boards with loss of funding should they require masks
in their schools. He continues to rants
even as his state reports
a total of 3.04 million cases, with 12,636 new cases of Delta variants and an
overall total of 42,252 deaths. Alabama has reported having no available ICU
beds due to its overwhelming level of severe unvaccinated COVID patients. The
top five states with percentages of populations afflicted are Mississippi,
Florida, Alabama, Arkansas, and Tennessee. (You remember Tennessee,
the state where the vaccine director was fired and they threatened health care workers in recent weeks!) Nationally vaccinations have begun to rise again with
a daily average of around 1 million doses a day. Maybe some people are finally
getting the message!
In Maryland,
the new cases are more than ten
times what they were a few short weeks ago. The state rate of being fully
vaccinated is now 60%.
COVID Stats – NY Times:
US totals: Total Cases: 37,777,607. New Cases:
149,675.
Total Deaths:
628,288. New deaths: 1,008.
Maryland
Totals: 8/20/21 – Total Cases: 484,847. New Cases: 1,206.
Total Deaths:
9,922. New Deaths: 6.
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Fortunately,
Hurricane Henri was not as devastating as it could have been to New York and
New England, although it left lots of rain and some power outages along the way.
Sending wishes for sunnier days!
I cannot quit
today without linking to the birthday party for the panda cub Xiao Qi Ji as that cute little one turns one-year-old! Happy Birthday, little guy!
‘Til next week –
peace!
Excellent Blog today, Sharon. I think I should just read your Blog each day instead of watching MSNBC! I do feel especially sorry for the women in Afghanistan. The small strides hey made in gov't and even driving will most likely be taken away, if not done already. Perhaps the US should have armed and trained the women.
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