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Tipsheet

ABC News Poll: Massive Majority Opposes Leaving Americans and Allies Behind in Afghanistan

AP Photo/Susan Walsh

All US personnel were supposed be out of Afghanistan by 3:29pm ET this afternoon, based on the Taliban deadline to which President Biden has obsessively adhered.  As we learned last evening, our withdrawal concluded 24 hours early.  Everyone recognized that there would be Americans and close allies left behind beyond that deadline -- and that is precisely what has happened, by the administration's own admission.  If you believe the administration's numbers, hundreds of Americans who wished to leave were left behind.  That figure for Afghan allies is estimated to be in the tens of thousands.  Imagine being among them, then learning that the US military left earlier than required.  Just days ago, the White House scolded a journalist for referring to Americans "stranded" in the country.  Now the stranded have been abandoned, left to hope that ad hoc rescue efforts and the good graces of the Taliban (perhaps with, shall we say, financial incentives) will at some point get them to safety.  For many, that day may never come, as the terror group finds itself flush with sophisticated, US-provided tools to hunt down and kill collaborators.  We've known that for days, the Taliban denied access to the airport to many credentialed Afghans, and even some Americans.  They've murdered others.  And as of yesterday, according to reports, civilian evacuations stopped entirely, as the military turned inward to evac its own people:

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The mess has been very bad, and could very well get worse.  For the dead-end partisans who insist that none of the pain, death, betrayal and humiliation could have been avoided, please refer to Sunday's Washington Post story reporting that the Taliban offered the US autonomy over Kabul security until the withdrawal deadline.  We proactively declined, handing "security" over to the terrorist organization, presumably because President Biden didn't want more US troops on the ground.  But imagine how a larger, very temporary footprint of American soldiers could have guaranteed the safe evacuation of thousands of additional Americans and allies.  Our leaders made a decision against that and chose to put the fates of thousands into the hands of the Taliban:

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"The result of this decision by President Biden and Gen. McKenzie is that Khalil Haqqani—an al Qaeda-linked terrorist with a $5 million U.S. bounty on his head—was placed in charge of security of Kabul," writes John McCormack.  The spin on so many aspects of the disastrous decision-making process does not stand up to cursory scrutiny.  Biden keeps passing the buck to military leaders after he hems them in with mandates:


There are no good answers on any of this.  Biden might be asked about his failures, but he really doesn't like being challenged on this crisis:

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"I'm not going to answer on Afghanistan," he said, mid-crisis, then literally and symbolically bugged out.  The American people are not impressed -- especially on the abandonment of our citizens and allies, in violation of a clear and repeatedly-stated promise:

More than 8 in 10 (84%) Americans think U.S. troops should remain in the country until all Americans are evacuated, and just over 7 in 10 (71%) think they should stay until all Afghans who helped the United States are evacuated as well. Breaking from the typical polarization that characterizes public attitudes, support for U.S. troops staying is strikingly consistent across party lines. Among Republicans, Democrats and independents, overwhelming majorities — 87%, 86% and 86%, respectively — believe U.S. troops should not leave until all Americans are out of Afghanistan. The partisan gap is also negligible for keeping troops in Afghanistan until all Afghans who aided the United States are evacuated, with 77% of Republicans, 72% of Democrats and 70% of independents saying troops should stay until that happens...Fewer than 4 in 10 (38%) Americans approve of the president’s handling of Afghanistan — 17 points lower than the share who said they approved of Biden’s handling of the U.S. troop withdrawal in a July 23-24 ABC News/Ipsos poll.
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And because the president has insisted (falsely) that no Americans were unable to get to Kabul airport in recent weeks, and that "every contingency" was planned for, I'll leave you with this update to his ludicrous assertion that our alliances have never been stronger and that he hasn't heard about any erosion in trust or credibility:


Joe Biden has seemed angrier with Ron DeSantis, Peter Doocy and the British government than with the Taliban in recent days.  This, from the ostensible guardian of norms, healer of partisan wounds, and restorer of American prestige in the world.  As we await the president's remarks, I'll leave you with this stark statement of fact, along with a disturbing image of the reprisals already underway, as the Taliban hung a man -- likely an "enemy," from what appears to be a US-made helicopter:

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