Former CENTCOM commander: “I advised against withdrawing” from Afghanistan

GEAR CHECK: Our readers don't just follow the news - they stay ready. Featured gear from this story is below.

Jamie Goldstein

The former top general in the United States’ Middle Eastern theater reported on Sunday that he had warned President Joe Biden of the catastrophic results from pulling out of Afghanistan in August of last year. According to the former CENTCOM commander, the Pentagon communicated to the White House in no uncertain terms that a total withdrawal from Afghanistan would all but guarantee the Taliban’s return to power and the dissolution of the Afghan government.

 

The former top general in the United States’ Middle Eastern theater reported on Sunday that he had warned President Joe Biden of the catastrophic results from pulling out of Afghanistan in August of last year. According to the former CENTCOM commander, the Pentagon communicated to the White House in no uncertain terms that a total withdrawal from Afghanistan would all but guarantee the Taliban’s return to power and the dissolution of the Afghan government.

The former chief of U.S. Central Command, Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie told “Fox News Sunday” that he believes that the United States had a good chance of keeping the Taliban subdued had the president maintained “a small contingent of American troops” in Afghanistan. He added that the Afghan government, backed by the United States, could have held onto power if Biden had not opted to withdraw completely.

Gen. McKenzie, who commanded CENTCOM during the Saigon-esque pull-out of Kabul said, “I advised against withdrawing, my recommendation and my opinion, and it remains so today, was we had the opportunity to remain in the country with a small force.”

This interview took place shortly before the one-year of the end of the longest war the US has ever fought.

McKenzie added, “We believe that Kabul would fall if we pull out our troops. It was just a question of when Kabul would fall and we have been saying that really since the fall of the year.”

EDITOR’S NOTE:

The General was probably right. We, as a nation, likely could have staved off the Taliban indefinitely. Our military certainly had the resources, the intelligence, and the resolve to suppress the Taliban for as long as we felt inclined to do so. But was that ever our job?

In Joe Biden’s initial address over the withdrawal from Afghanistan, he said:

“Our mission in Afghanistan was never supposed to have been nation building.  It was never supposed to be creating a unified, centralized democracy. Our only vital national interest in Afghanistan remains today what it has always been: preventing a terrorist attack on American homeland.”

That being the case, why on Earth would we have stayed? Why would we leave a contingency of US troops behind to absorb an inevitable barrage of Taliban attacks while Afghan Soldiers and Police continued to sell equipment, clothing, and fuel to the Taliban rather than fight them?

Was the withdrawal mismanaged? It certainly appears to have been. Was it an embarrassment to our nations executive and military leaders? Without a doubt. But it was also long overdue. And extending out presence in Afghanistan for even one more day to keep the nation’s former government from reassuming power on behalf of a people with no interest in having a national identity or a diplomatically run government, would not have prevented any great tragedy… it would only delay it.

Yes, we could have stayed and kept the Taliban at bay. But they could have and would have waited us out for as long as they had to — just as they had done against every occupying force that has ever had the misfortune of taking arms against the indigenous people of the region. 

<iframe loading="lazy" title="Real Veteran Talks about Kabul  | Noncommissioned News | VET Tv" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/m1DuxPC7rbg?feature=oembed" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen="" name="fitvid0"></iframe>

You may also like

Blog

While many Americans were celebrating the Fourth of July holiday, several off-duty first responders across the country were making life-or-death decisions. In one of the most remarkable rescues, an off-duty firefighter and sheriff's deputy risked their own lives to pull a family from a house engulfed in flames before firefighters arrived.
A former Michigan Army National Guard member has been arrested after federal prosecutors accused him of trying to help ISIS carry out a mass-casualty attack on a U.S. military base. Investigators say the alleged plot involved drones, explosives, and tactical support before the suspect was taken into custody by the FBI.
An unknown pilot celebrated America's upcoming 250th anniversary with an extraordinary aviation tribute, flying a meticulously planned route over Ohio that created a giant outline of the United States with "USA 250th" written inside. The patriotic flight quickly captured attention online ahead of Independence Day celebrations.
A Tesla driver who suffered a major heart attack while driving between Atlanta and Birmingham credits the vehicle's technology and his son's quick thinking for helping save his life. After the medical emergency began, his son remotely redirected the car to a hospital using the Tesla app while the vehicle continued operating with Full Self-Driving (Supervised) engaged.
Instead of letting money seized from drug traffickers sit in government accounts, the Orange County Sheriff's Office in Florida has turned it into something few expected. A free ice cream truck that is helping deputies build trust with children and families across the community.

Like This Story? Check Out What Our Community Is Buying

Our best sellers are designed for real-world use - not hype.

View Best Sellers