President Joe Biden made a forceful defense Tuesday of his “wise” decision to leave Afghanistan, telling Americans he refuses to send another generation to fight in a “forever war.”
The traumatic departure from Afghanistan, completed Monday after 20 years of war against the Taliban, was “a wise decision and the best decision for America,” Biden said in an address to the nation.
After coming under fire from Republican opponents over the chaotic nature of the rush to the exits in Afghanistan, Biden said he did what should have been done years ago.
“I was not going to extend this forever war and I was not extending a forever exit,” he said.
Speaking in the ornate State Dining Room of the White House, Biden thumped the lectern as he detailed the extraordinary costs of a war more than 2,400 US military deaths and up to $2.3 trillion spent that ended with the Taliban guerrillas back in power.
“I take responsibility for the decision,” he said.
“I made a commitment to the American people that I would end this war. Today, I honored that commitment. It was time to be honest,” he said.
“After 20 years in Afghanistan I refused to send another generation of America’s sons and daughters to fight a war.”
Biden takes heat
Following two weeks of evacuation flights a titanic effort marred by a suicide bombing that killed 13 US service members and scores of Afghans Biden faces a chorus of criticism that could yet hurt him domestically.
Getting out of the last big post-9/11 war was one of Biden’s campaign promises coming into office. The idea was overwhelmingly popular.
But the US departure, culminating with a solitary airplane lifting at midnight from Kabul with the last troops and diplomats, brought home for many that the so-called “drawdown” or “retrograde” really amounted to jarring defeat.
Republicans, led by Biden’s bitter predecessor Donald Trump, paint the exit as a humiliating failure, a defeat that outdoes even the 1975 evacuation from Saigon, and a signal to the world that the United States has given up.
“We are not done with you yet,” he said.
But he also broadened his argument, reaching out to Americans who have long questioned the need for US attempts to attempt nation building in hostile countries.
With the departure from Afghanistan, the United States is “ending an era of major military operations to remake other countries,” he said.
“Human rights will be at the center of our foreign policy but the way to do that is not through endless military deployments.”
