Biden doubles down on Afghanistan decision notes potential terror attack
A defiant President Biden on Sunday stood by his decision to pull troops out of Afghanistan â though acknowledged during a bumbling press briefing that terror groups like ISIS could now be poised to strike.
âLet me be clear, the evacuation of thousands of people from Kabul is going to be hard and painful no matter when it started, when we began,â said Biden, who stumbled over his words at several points while speaking from the White House.
âThere is no way to evacuate this many people without pain and loss and heartbreaking images you see on television,â he continued. âItâs just a fact.
âWe have a long way to go and a lot could still go wrong.â
At one point, he also doubled down on his withdrawal decision, saying âMy job is to make judgments.
âMy job is to make judgments no one else can or will make. I made them,â he continued. âI am convinced I am absolutely correct in not deciding to send more women and men to war for a war that in fact is no longer warranted.â
Biden also said the Taliban has been âcooperativeâ in expanding the US-held safety zone surrounding the Kabul airport, at one point calling the militants âa rag-tag force.â
He said that âthe safe zoneâ has been extended but acknowledged that his Aug. 31 deadline to get US citizens and Afghan allies out could be extended.
Some 28,000 people have been evacuated since the country fell to the Taliban â including 11,000 in the past 36 hours â the president said, as he conceded that the situation remains dangerous.
A total of 33,000 have been evacuated since July before the country fell, he said.
âThe security environment is changing rapidly,â he said. âWe know that terrorists may seek to exploit the situation and target innocent Afghans or American troops.
âTheyâre maintaining constant vigilance â weâre maintaining constant vigilance,â he stumbled, âto monitor and disrupt threats from any source, including the likely source being ISIS, ISIS-K, the Afghan affiliate.
âWeâre under no illusions about the threat,â he said.
Asked by a reporter if he trusted the Taliban, Biden seemed awkwardly amused, grinning while replying, âI donât trust anybody, including you.â
âI love you, but, you know, thereâs not a lot of people I trust,â he answered. âLook, the Taliban has to make a fundamental decision. Is the Taliban going to be able to attempt to be able to unite and provide for the well being of the people of Afghanistan, which no one group has ever done for hundreds of years?â
Biden was also asked after he left the podium whether heâd consider sanctions against the Taliban, which the British have suggested, âif they misbehave.â
âThe answer is yes,â Biden replied. âDepends on the conduct.â
At another point while fielding questions from reporters, he laughed and appeared to consult a cue card.
Biden also brushed off results of an NBC News poll that found 60 percent of Americans disapprove of his handling of the Afghan situation.
âI havenât seen that poll,â he said, laughing.
Biden said evacuated refugees are being flown to transfer sites on US military bases and other places in third-party countries, where they are being processed and subjected to background checks.
Once theyâre cleared they will be transported to the US or other countries by a âcivil reserve fleetâ of planes volunteered by major airlines â an operation he likened to the Berlin Airlift during the Cold War.
âI think that history is going to record this was the logical, rational and right decision to make,â he said of the decision to withdraw.
Biden has been under increasing pressure since ordering US troops to pull out of Afghanistan after a 20-year occupation, sparking a swift takeover by the Taliban and stranding thousands of American citizens and US allies at the airport in Kabul.
On Sunday morning, Biden met with national security officials for an update on the situation, the White House said in a statement.
âThey discussed the security situation and counterterrorism operations, including ISIS-K,â it said. âThe national security team discussed the ongoing and intensive diplomatic and military efforts to facilitate transit at third-country transit hubs, affirming the importance of the contributions that more than two dozen partner nations are making to this global effort.â
Administration officials said 7,800 people have been evacuated from the airport in the Afghan capital in the past day. Military officials said earlier that 17,000 had been evacuated in the past week, including 2,500 US citizens.
Nonetheless, thousands remain in Kabul desperate to flee the Taliban, including US citizens and Afghans who assisted during the two-decade military presence.
Earlier on Sunday, US Defense Secretary Loyd Austin said on ABCâs âThis Weekâ that there had been âno good optionsâ once the decision to withdraw was made.
Austin said estimates had been that US-trained Afghan forces would hold out as long as two years â but they collapsed in a matter of days.
Meanwhile, Biden on Sunday also addressed the impact of Tropical Storm Henri, saying FEMA has been deployed to help deal with the storm.
âFEMA has already prepositioned resources in the region to speed our ability to respond, including food, water, life-saving communications equipment as well as generators,â he said.
States of emergencies were declared in New York, Connecticut and Rhode Island ahead of the storm, which smacked into the Northeast on Sunday.
Henri, which barrelled off the coast of Montauk as a Category 1 hurricane late Saturday, made landfall in Rhode Island as a tropical storm shortly after midday Sunday with sustained winds of 60 mph and gusts up to 70 mph, the National Hurricane Center said.