WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Tuesday gave a forceful defense of his decision to pull troops from Afghanistan as critics question the chaotic final chapter of the nation’s longest war.

“I was not going to extend this forever war, and I was not extending a forever exit,” he said at the White House in his first public speech since the last U.S. troops left Afghanistan.

It’s time, he said, to stop using American soldiers to remake other countries. “I don’t think enough people understand how much we’ve asked of the 1 percent of this country who put that uniform on.”

Biden also credited his administration’s evacuation efforts in Afghanistan as an “extraordinary success.” Herejected criticism from some that his administration could have handled the evacuations better by either beginning to evacuate people earlier in the summer or by extending the timeline beyond the Aug. 31 deadline in an effort to get more Afghan allies and Americans out of the country.

No matter when the U.S. started evacuations, he said, there would have been a rush to the airport and staying longer would have meant escalating conflict with the Taliban.

“Leaving Aug. 31st is not due to an arbitrary deadline. It was designed to save American lives,” Biden said. “The bottom line is that there is no evacuation from the end of a war that you can run without the kind of complexities, challenges and threats that we faced. None.”

Aug. 31, 202101:46

The last U.S. flight out of Kabul took off a minute before midnight local time Monday. It was met with fireworks and gunfire as the Taliban celebrated the withdrawal, 20 years after their regime was toppled by American forces.

The war in Afghanistan has been costly. More than 47,000 civilians and 2,400 U.S. service members have been killed in the 20-year conflict, according to Brown University’s Costs of War project. The final years of the conflict were some of the bloodiest, with civilian casualties in Afghanistan reaching record levels in the first half of 2021, according to the United Nations.

Thirteen U.S. service members and more than 100 Afghan civilians were killed Wednesday, just days before the final withdrawal, in a suicide bomb outside the Kabul airport.

The past month of chaos and bloodshed in Afghanistan has drawn focus during a stretch the White House had hoped would be devoted to Biden’s domestic agenda, including efforts to steer more than $4 trillion in new spending on infrastructure, health care and education programs through a heavily divided Congress.

Aug. 31, 202101:49

The majority of Americans said they disapproved of Biden’s handling of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released Monday, but just 20 percent of respondents said he deserved the “most blame for the current state” of the conflict.

Administration officials have said that they will continue to work to assist Americans and eligible Afghans who still want to leave Afghanistan and that they will continue diplomatic relations with the country even though the U.S. will no longer have any personnel on the ground.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told ABC News on Tuesday that the U.S. evacuated between 5,500 and 6,000 Americans since August 14, or “about 97 or 98 percent of those on the ground.”

Two sources familiar with the operation emphasized that Americans were given multiple opportunities over the course of more than two weeks to leave.

U.S. officials, working on the ground in Kabul, at the State Department in Washington, and in other diplomatic facilities around the world operated what was described as a “rolling, 24/7 operation” to contact all Americans who communicated their interest in leaving the country and help facilitate their evacuation. Officials made 55,000 phone calls, sent 33,000 email as part of a process that started with three simple questions: Where are you? Do you want to leave now? And do you need help getting to the airport?, the people familiar with the process said.

Officials emphasized that those 100 to 200 Americans who were not evacuated by Monday’s deadline were among the most nuanced and complicated cases: individuals with dual citizenship and deep roots in Afghanistan; those with large extended families including noncitizens they hoped to bring with them; or those who waited until very late in the process to express their interest in leaving.

“The Americans left weren’t at the bottom of the list,” one source said. “They were making a judgment call every day what they wanted to do.”

Efforts now to evacuate those remaining Americans will depend on a diplomatic pressure campaign that will test the administration’s belief that it holds significant leverage over the Taliban to ensure their continued cooperation.

Sullivan said Tuesday that the U.S. plans to continue providing humanitarian aid to the Afghan people through international organizations and may offer economic and developmental assistance to that nation, depending on the Taliban’s actions in the days ahead.

“We do believe that there is an important dimension of humanitarian assistance that should go directly to the people of Afghanistan,” Sullivan said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Biden has maintained it was no longer in America’s interest to keep a military presence in Afghanistan and that the U.S. has the capabilities to fight any terrorist threat there from outside its borders.

But the attack by the terror group ISIS-K last week that resulted in the death of 13 U.S. service members and at least 170 civilians was a stark reminder of the threat ahead. There are at least 2,000 ISIS fighters currently in Afghanistan, many of whom escaped from Afghan prisons that were opened as the Taliban seized control, according to Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie, the head of U.S. Central Command.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

AOC-Velázquez Puerto Rico bill sets needed path to decolonization, progressives say

A group of progressive organizations are pushing for passage of a bill…

Pete Davidson charged with reckless driving after crashing car into Beverly Hills house

Pete Davidson has been charged with a misdemeanor count of reckless driving…

PGA Tour Deal With LIV Golf Puts Sponsors on the Spot

Share Listen (2 min) This post first appeared on wsj.com

Supreme Court to rule on affirmative action and student loans

46m ago / 12:10 PM UTC Looming Supreme Court affirmative action ruling…