The Global Kashmir
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Kashmir
    • Jammu
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • E-Paper
en English
ar Arabiczh-CN Chinese (Simplified)en Englishru Russianes Spanishur Urdu
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Kashmir
    • Jammu
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • E-Paper
No Result
View All Result
The Global Kashmir
No Result
View All Result
IMG 20210929 WA0017

Afghanistan: Biden was advised to keep 2,500 troops, say generals

Two top US generals have said they recommended keeping a force of 2,500 troops in Afghanistan, ahead of the full US withdrawal in August

News Desk by News Desk
September 29, 2021
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
10
VIEWS
Share on Facebook

Testimony by Gen Mark Milley and Gen Frank McKenzie to Congress seemed to contradict President Joe Biden, who said he did not recall any such advice.The Taliban took power in August, after rapidly advancing through the country.

READ ALSO

Modi calls out Trump’s narrative on India-Pak conflict; says New Delhi will never accept mediation

Bomb Blast Derails Six Carriages Of Jaffar Express In Pakistan

PM Modi Calls Prez Trump, Makes Clear Operation Sindoor Was ‘Paused’ Following Request From Pakistan

Gen Milley said the US had been taken by surprise by the speed of the Afghan government’s collapse.
The two US generals were questioned by the Senate armed services committee along with Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin on Tuesday.
The hearing comes weeks after a chaotic withdrawal at Kabul airport as foreign powers sought to get their citizens home and thousands of desperate Afghans begged for rescue.

A suicide attack killed 182 people during the withdrawal operation. Thirteen US service personnel and at least 169 Afghans were killed by the airport gate on 26 August.

Keeping troops on the ground
Gen McKenzie, who as head of US Central Command oversaw the withdrawal from Afghanistan, said under questioning from Republican senators that he recommended keeping a small force of 2,500 troops in Afghanistan.

This appears to contradict President Joe Biden’s assertion to an ABC journalist on 19 August that he did not recall anyone giving him such advice.

Gen Milley said that he agreed with the recommendation, but when asked by Alaska Republican Dan Sullivan whether Mr Biden’s comments were “a false statement”, he refused to give a direct answer. Later White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki addressed the issue.

“The president values the candid advice of… the joint chiefs and the military,” she said. “That doesn’t mean he always agrees with it.”

ADVERTISEMENT

She said that if troops remained in the country after the August deadline the US would now be at war with the Taliban.

Mark Milley, Lloyd Austin and Kenneth McKenzie may have been testifying before Congress, but Joe Biden’s own words did the most damage to the president on Tuesday.

Republicans hammered the president for recent statements that the generals, either explicitly or indirectly, contradicted.

During an August interview, Biden insisted there were no generals urging him to keep some US troops in Afghanistan to prevent a Taliban takeover. Both Gen Milley and Gen McKenzie said they thought those troops were needed and, at one point, the latter said he told the president as much.

Republican senators also questioned why Mr Biden had promised to keep the military in place until all US citizens were evacuated, given that there are still Americans in Afghanistan weeks after the final withdrawal.

Finally, both generals firmly stated that al-Qaeda is still present in Afghanistan – directly contradicting Biden’s earlier statement that the terrorist organisation had been eradicated.

All that gave Republicans ammunition to accuse the president of lying to the American people.

Mr Biden didn’t have to make such sweeping assurances. He could have simply said he considered the military’s advice but stood by his decision to withdraw. Like many politicians before him, however, he talked his way into trouble.

Caught off-guard’
Tuesday’s hearing began with opening testimony from Mr Austin, followed by Gen Milley, who said it would now be harder to protect Americans from terrorist attacks from Afghanistan.

“The Taliban was and remains a terrorist organisation and still has not broken ties with al-Qaeda,” he said.

“A reconstituted al-Qaeda or ISIS [Islamic State group] with aspirations to attack the US is a very real possibility, and those conditions to include activity in ungoverned spaces could present themselves in the next 12-36 months.”

Gen Milley said he made an assessment in late 2020 that an accelerated troop withdrawal from Afghanistan could precipitate the government’s collapse.

But both he and Mr Austin both testified that the speed of the collapse caught the US military off-guard.

“We helped build a state, but we could not forge a nation,” Mr Austin said.

“The fact that the Afghan army we and our partners trained simply melted away – in many cases without firing a shot – took us all by surprise.”

US troops first entered Afghanistan in late 2001, shortly after the 9/11 attacks. By the time they left, the US had spent about $985bn (£724bn) and deployed tens of thousands of troops, peaking at 110,000 in 2011.

In the weeks between the fall of Kabul and the withdrawal deadline of 31 August, the US evacuated its remaining 4,000 troops. It is also taking about 50,000 Afghan refugees who were airlifted out of Kabul.

As many as 20 people died in the crowds which gathered at the airport in the days after the Taliban takeover.

Who is Gen Mark Milley?

He’s Joe Biden’s top military adviser – the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (the committee of the eight highest-ranking military officials)
He’s not part of the chain of command with the military and does not order US forces
However, he is the link between the White House and the Pentagon
He was a four-star officer and the Army Chief of Staff before being appointed to lead the Joint Chiefs of Staff in October 2019.

ShareTweetSendSharePinShare
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

JK reports 95 new positive cases, 323378 recovered so far

Next Post

Sidhique Kappan: Jailed and ‘tortured’ for trying to report a rape

RelatedPosts

Modi calls out Trump’s narrative on India-Pak conflict; says New Delhi will never accept mediation

Modi calls out Trump’s narrative on India-Pak conflict; says New Delhi will never accept mediation

June 19, 2025
Bomb Blast Derails Six Carriages Of Jaffar Express In Pakistan

Bomb Blast Derails Six Carriages Of Jaffar Express In Pakistan

June 18, 2025
PM Modi Calls Prez Trump, Makes Clear Operation Sindoor Was ‘Paused’ Following Request From Pakistan

PM Modi Calls Prez Trump, Makes Clear Operation Sindoor Was ‘Paused’ Following Request From Pakistan

June 18, 2025

PM Modi holds ‘productive’ exchanges with G7 leaders on key global challenges

PM Modi Arrives In Canada For G7 Summit, Says Will Emphasise Priorities Of Global South

We Both Think ‘This Is Not An Era Of War’: PM Modi After Talks With Cyprus Prez

India Positioned To Become World’s Third-Largest Economy, Says PM Modi In Cyprus

PM Modi arrives in Cyprus on first leg of three-nation tour

UN conference on Palestinian State postponed amid Middle East tensions

Next Post
Sidhique Kappan: Jailed and ‘tortured’ for trying to report a rape

Sidhique Kappan: Jailed and 'tortured' for trying to report a rape

172 New Covid-19 Cases, No Death Reported In J&K

U.S. is averaging more than 2,000 newly reported deaths a day and is approaching 700,000 total coronavirus deaths

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

ADVERTISEMENT

Company Info

Address: F11 silk factory road Tulsibagh, Srinagar
Phone : 9797970347.
Email : globalkashmir786@gmail.com
Owner, printer, publisher Editor : Suhail Yousuf Shah
Legal advisor : Advocate Umar Mushtaq
Printed at : LUBAAB PUBLICATIONS LAWAYPORA SRINAGAR
Published from : Green house Soitang, Srinagar, Kashmir.
RNI No : JKENG/2011/38364
Office No's :
Postal Regd No : JKNP 160 / SKGPO 2012 - 2014

About

The Global Kashmir was founded in Srinagar, with a vision to promote positive news from the Kashmir valley and across the globe. Covering first hand, all categories of news from different corners of Jammu and Kashmir as well as relevant national and international news stories. Global Kashmir is dedicated to providing unbiased stories that are yet to be told...

News By Topic

Company Info

  • Contact Us
  • About

© 2022 - Global Kashmir

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Kashmir
    • Jammu
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • E-Paper

© 2022 - Global Kashmir