Friday, September 3, 2021

"The Day America Died..."

 I clipped this from "American Patriot.  I am still so pissed, so disgusted, so embarrassed, so ashamed and just angry on how this went down, and how totally unnecessary it was.  I will probably "do" a rant next week when my hot emotions have calmed down and my logic and common sense can once use the keyboard without using a bunch of invective's and throwing things.

Biden's AFG Retreat Complete — The War Is NOT Over

What Milley, Austin, and the other Beltway high command failed to see was the red flag right in front of them.

Mark Alexander

Amid all the exit fanfare yesterday from feckless Joe Biden and his inept senior military and diplomatic cadres, I was deeply moved by a single sentence that sums up what was conceived as an orderly troop drawdown under Donald Trump, but devolved into a disgraceful retreat under Biden.

"In what f***ing world was it a good idea to just hand over a country to these people."

Those words were from Operation Enduring Freedom combat veteran and former Navy SEAL Dan Crenshaw (R-TX). That post was over a video of a seized Blackhawk helicopter being flown by Taliban militia over an Afghan town — lumbering low over rooftops with one of our former Afghan allies dangling lifeless, hanging by the neck, under the aircraft.

Despite the assertion by Biden and his Leftmedia parrots that our AFG mission is over, take no comfort — this was NOT the end of the war. It is the beginning of a violent purge of those Joe Biden just abandoned — our allied Afghans and their wives and children, along with hundreds of American citizens who were seeking to exit but were left behind. It is the beginning of the rise of a new age of terrorism — Biden has reseeded al-Qa'ida's turf, and demonstrated to far more powerful tyrants in China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea that they have nothing to fear from Biden.

For Biden's boundless ineptitude, we will pay a price much heavier than the disaster we left in Afghanistan. Brace yourself, America.

We disgracefully abandoned our citizens after Biden's commitment not to do so. We also abandoned more than 80,000 Afghan "Special Immigration Visa" holders — those who were already vetted as being clearly allied with our military and now marked for death — along with tens of thousands of others who were waiting on visas. That disgrace was captured by these words from our national security analyst, Gen. B.B. Bell, U.S. Army (Ret.), who described the circumstances as "the single most dishonorable act by my country that I have witnessed since my first day of military service on 5 June 1969." Gen. Bell added: "Today I am ashamed of my country. I am ashamed of my country's political leadership. I am ashamed of our military leadership. Today, in my heart, America died. I hang my head in shame. I'm so very sorry for those Americans and our Afghan allies we have abandoned. May God protect them as we have not."

Announcing mission over but certainly not accomplished, Gen. Frank McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command, declared: "I'm here to announce the completion of our withdrawal from Afghanistan and the end of the mission to evacuate American citizens, third country nationals and vulnerable Afghans. The last C-17 lifted off from Hamid Karzai International Airport on August 30, this afternoon at 3:29 pm East coast time..." He added, "No words from me could possibly capture the full measure of sacrifices and accomplishments of those who served, nor the emotions they're feeling at this moment."

Well, here are a few words that put numbers to that sacrifice: Over the last 20 years, 2,461 of our military personnel were killed by Taliban militia, the Islamist extremists who invaded Afghanistan in 1996 and became the hosts of terrorist who struck out against the world, including those who perpetrated the 9/11 Islamist attack on our nation. We suffered more than 20,000 injured veterans, many of whom endured life-altering injuries. We spent $824.9 billion on military operations, but we have spent far more than that when considering care for injured veterans. Over the same two decades, our allied Afghan deaths top an estimated 69,000, and an additional 47,000 civilians were killed.

So we leave the AFG theater, and the Taliban thugs are now in a much more powerful position than when we arrived in 2001. They are far more dangerous and deadly because of billions of dollars in U.S. military equipment Biden left behind, and Afghanistan is a fully restored breeding ground for the world's most deadly terrorists.

The catastrophic failure of our mission and retreat was not because of any lack of courage and commitment from our warfighters. As I have noted, the problem was not the plan; it was the man.

According to Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley, "There was nothing that I or anyone else saw that indicated a collapse of this army and this government in 11 days." How could that be? As Tucker Carlson noted: "Our intelligence agencies received a combined $85 billion last year. For perspective, that's more money than Russia, Germany, and the UK spent on their entire annual military budgets."

What Milley, Austin, and the other Beltway high command failed to see was the red flag right in front of them the whole time: Joe Biden. And it is because the Taliban had no fear of Biden that this evil overran the Afghan government and people in just days. With Trump gone, the Taliban summarily discarded all the conditions he set for withdrawal and ousted the Afghan government.

After McKenzie's announcement, Secretary of State Antony Blinken's staffers issued notice that our Afghan embassy had suspended all operations.

Biden then delivered a few prepared remarks thanking his commanders for such a fine job. At the same time, the Taliban was taking over Kabul airport and celebrating the additional armaments and aircraft we left there — and all the caged military service dogs.

Even the Washington Post editorial board declared Biden's retreat was a "moral disaster." They are much too kind.

Regardless of how Biden et al. attempt to spin this disaster, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell was clear about the national security threat outcome. He noted, "This is one of the worst foreign policy decisions in American history, much worse than Saigon," because the withdrawal from Vietnam did not signal a significant threat to Americans. To that point, he added: "Just because we decided to stop fighting doesn't mean the terrorists go away. So they're still out there. They're invigorated. They're emboldened. They're excited about the success they see in bringing America to its knees in Afghanistan."

Biden's compressed Afghan exit schedule was motivated by his desire to take a political victory lap ahead of the 20th observance of the 9/11 Islamist attack on our nation. There will be no victory lap. There will be more Islamist attacks against the U.S.

4 comments:

  1. The DNC and the current administration is owned 100% by the CCP. Afghanistan has a trillion dollars or more in mineral resources. The CCP wants these minerals. That required making us !eave. A phone call from Beijing to Pedo Joe and the retreat was ordered. It's not complicated.

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    1. Hey Daniel;

      I figured China would be making a play for those minerals. I also heard that the Chinese and Russian embassies were remaining open and unmolested but everyone else shut theirs down.

      Delete
  2. Yep, cluster of MASSIVE proportions... And MG Donahue was also an embarrassment... Refusing to cooperate with the allies, KNOWING a bomber was coming, and leaving the Marines hung out to dry on the Abby Gate is unconscionable...

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    Replies
    1. Hey Old NFO;

      Yep and there is no accountability in that chain of command. Now "We" would have been UCMJ'ed immediately and sent to Leavenworth then get the "Bad Chicken Dinner". but they skate, no repercussions, no penalties, no punishment. it disgust me.

      Delete

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