Biden Tries To Gaslight America On Afghanistan

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by Charlie Kirk title via Lifezette

As the chaos of the United States’ “successful” evacuation from Afghanistan envelopes America’s collective psyche, many are asking the question: “What exactly is the Biden Doctrine on foreign policy?”
 
Well, on Aug. 19, Joe Biden sat down with ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos and gave his most telling indication yet.
 
Though ABC News attempted to scrub the interview of some of Biden’s less than flattering moments, the news outlet still managed to capture and air one of the most incredible exchanges ever witnessed involving “the leader of the free world” on television.
 
While questioning Biden on the increasingly humiliating withdrawal strategy out of Afghanistan, Stephanopoulos commented, “There’s still a lot of pandemonium outside the airport right now.”
 
To which, Biden replied, “But look, no one’s being killed right now,” then literally knocked on wood. “God forgive me if I’m wrong about that,” he concluded. 
 



 
Biden’s “Knock on Wood Doctrine” was born in that exact moment, and it has left 13 servicemen tragically dead and hundreds of Americans stranded. 
 
In eight short months, America has gone from the Doctrine of America First and “peace through strength,” to that of American weakness, literally trusting terrorists to keep our troops safe. The few times Biden has lowered himself to taking questions about his failures in Afghanistan, he has demurred, placing much of the blame on a previous treaty signed by President Trump. 
 
This is nonsense, of course, and there are a few very obvious reasons why. Since taking office Biden has been pathologically bent on reversing nearly every single Trump-era policy he could by executive fiat.
 
Trump left the World Health Organization; Biden promptly rejoined. Trump rejected the Paris climate accord; Biden promptly rejoined. Trump established the very successful Remain in Mexico policy for illegal immigrants; Biden immediately cancelled MPP, which led to a historic migrant crisis at the southern border. (Thankfully, the Supreme Court recently ruled that the Biden administration must restart MPP).
 
At every turn, Biden’s record-breaking executive order onslaught was designed with one guiding principle in mind: Whatever Trump did, do the opposite, the consequences be damned. And yet, we’re supposed to believe that Joe Biden inherited an unworkable mess from President Trump and he wasn’t able to reverse course? 
 
The other glaring issue with Biden’s gaslighting attempts to blame President Trump for this foreign policy disaster – and the perfect embodiment of the Biden Knock on Wood Doctrine – is that while Trump terrified the Taliban into compliance, Biden’s hope and prayer execution is marked by weakness, which has only emboldened America’s enemies around the world.
 
Even as Biden threatens to “hunt” the terrorist that killed our servicemen and bring them to justice, it has lacked conviction. Then as news that an ISIS-K planner was killed in retaliation, swirling news reports suggested he was not a high-level target after all, directly contradicting the White House narrative. As if that weren’t bad enough, the strike killed innocent Afghan civilians, including nine family members and six children. 
 

 
It’s no secret that Trump wanted to end the war in Afghanistan as soon as he took office, but his was always a conditions-based withdrawal. He proved it, too. In September 2019, he shocked the world while drawing widespread criticism, canceling peace talks when he felt the Taliban weren’t living up to their end of the bargain.
 
Trump eventually signed a peace deal in February 2020, but it was always predicated upon strict compliance by the Taliban. Trump even warned the Taliban that he would bomb their family villages if so much as a hair on the head of an American was harmed. 
 
Secretary of State Michael Pompeo reiterated the Trump administration’s willingness to take aggressive action in an appearance on Fox News on Friday: 
 
“…the Taliban understood that if they acted against Americans and took actions that were inconsistent with what they had promised to do, we’d respond and we did. We did it multiple times. When they pushed on us and the Trump administration, we responded with American power and American might…”
 
By contrast, Biden didn’t just withdraw, he surrendered.

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Every President from now on, no matter how badly they fail, will be able to honestly say, “At least it’s better than idiot Biden.”

No one knows how many lies biden has told. We can assume everything he has said is a lie

A deceitful son of a bitch

Yeah, I don’t imagine WaPo and CNN are spending much time creating a list, as they did with Trump. Of course if they did, they wouldn’t have to include promises he hasn’t had time to fulfill, take statements out of context or simply lie about what he said and what he’s done.

joey the pedophile is a sociopathic LIAR, of which there is no cure.
the current pedophile, faux pres. is, quite simply, a man unsuited to meet the challenges of the present moment. He is out of his league and, one hopes sooner rather than later, will find himself out of political time.

Something Missing

Just a short note of something rather insignificant in the grand scheme of things….

We are told by the powers that be – that approximately 6,000 to 7,000 American citizens were rescued by daring efforts of the U.S. State Department and U.S. military in evacuations from Kabul airport. Okay, fair enough… that’s a good outcome. Happy to hear it; we can debate the other 116,000 at a later time.

However, it seems a little odd now that there’s no videos of the survivors of the Afghan crisis arriving at airports. No crowds or families greeting the extracted American residents; no human interest stories and local broadcasted news coverage of relieved Americans, husbands, wives, daughters or sons arriving back in their hometown…. nothing.

Six to seven thousand Americans saved from the clutches of the Taliban, and not a single story of those Americans arriving home to the waiting arms of their loving family.
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Just weird.

Carry on.

We also know from reports that there were some 86k pre biometrically approved evacuees that likely did not make it out.

Why did biden not accept the opportunity to secure the Kabul airport but instead turned over perimeter security to the taliban?

There are additionally reports from the ground that Americans as well as SIV’s were denied access to the tarmac after having made it past taliban checkpoints.

The people who were herded onto planes were only vetted by the taliban. We have no idea who these people are, their intentions and the potential for terrorist violence to occur here is unquestionable.

These unknown afghans should be rounded up and sent back to the shithole from whence they came…

There is a thought amongst those who are untrustworthy of biden, et al.

There is an emerging narrative that the taliban is trustworthy based on a false narrative that they were instrumental in the evacuation of 122k people.
And, going forward will need our assistance(official diplomatic recognition as well as monetary aid) in their ongoing fight against al queda, isis K and the haqqani.
The US government will begin pushing this narrative in an attempt to change the mood among Americans to favor their treasonous actions.

There is a grander scheme at play here because of the dozens upon dozens of unanswered questions about what really happened in Afghanistan and why…

Bungled Afghanistan Withdrawal Evokes Fear that Biden Spun Up Months-Long False Narrative

The botched withdrawal from Afghanistan has some worried that the Biden administration spun up a two-month false narrative, misleading Congress and the public.

As reported by Just the News, two pieces of evidence surfaced this week that strongly suggest the withdrawal wasn’t just a case of incompetence, rather it was an intentional effort to disguise a Biden plan that was secretly willing to accept chaos to avoid further military casualties.

The first piece of evidence is a leaked transcript of a call that quoted Biden asking Afghanistan’s president to offer a narrative that would change the “perception” of the Taliban’s rapid advance, “whether it is true or not.”

“I Need not tell you the perception around the world and in parts of Afghanistan, I believe, is that things are not going well in terms of the fight against the Taliban,” Biden is quoted as saying. “And there is a need, whether it is true or not, there is a need to project a different picture.”

Earlier this week, Biden administration officials also conceded the president granted himself a waiver to avoid giving Congress a legally required report on the dangers of withdrawing from Afghanistan, leaving lawmakers in the dark about it all.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are left feeling deceived.

“This administration has lied to the American people, to Congress, to the world,” Rep. Kat Cammack told Just the News. “I can’t even begin to tell you how frustrated I have been, my team, my constituents. It has been absolutely, utterly disheartening. We know that there were soldiers that were there, helping getting people through the gates, they were trying to move people. They were kind of beholden to the State Department because State was really driving this operation and they couldn’t process paperwork fast enough.”

“Congress was told repeatedly that Afghanistan Defense and Security Forces were up to the task, that it had the troops, equipment and willingness to fight,” Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Menendez, a democrat, said. “To see this army dissolve so quickly after billions of dollars in U.S. support is astounding. The American and Afghan people clearly have not been told the truth about the ANDSF’s capacity and deserve answers.”

Josh Hammer offers the following:

the oldest man ever elected to the most powerful office in the world, Joe Biden is not merely doddering in palpable senility, flailing haplessly before the cameras with a wizened countenance that is a microcosm for American decline. He has not merely exposed himself, both physically and mentally, as wholly unfit for the formidable task required of an American president in 2021: that of a Lincoln-esque statesman who can tame a nation’s simmering angst, salve a fractious republic’s gaping wounds, and reorient ourselves toward the pursuit of a coherent common good.

Biden is, quite simply, a man unsuited to meet the challenges of the present moment. He is out of his league and, one hopes sooner rather than later, will find himself out of political time.

And of course the M.S. Media lap this stuff up and spew it to the rest of us since their total Democrat Voters and Supporters one just had to read their fake news or see it on the TV to know that

Biden Bolts From Podium When Reporter Asks About Americans Stranded in Afghanistan

Moron tries to tell Americans the economy is booming

Meanwhile;

Huge Jobs Report Miss: Just 235K Jobs Added to US Economy When Experts Predicted 725K — Black Unemployment Rate Surg

He is appealing to dim wits that don’t realize that businesses don’t pay taxes; they pass them on to their customers. So it is the customers that get taxed and the businesses that move overseas because they can no longer compete in the marketplace.

Democrats simply cannot understand economic reality. They just think they can tax, tax, tax and everyone just eats it.

The demand to resettle Afghan refugees brings the war home.

Perennial Democratic White House aide, congressman, Chicago mayor, and ambassador-in-waiting Rahm Emmanuel’s sole memorable utterance—his only candidate for Bartlett’s—is his cynical 2008 maxim that the good guys (i.e., his team) must “never let a serious crisis go to waste.” He was speaking of using the financial crisis to usher in sweeping changes to law, policy, the economy, and society that would otherwise not have been possible through ordinary democratic processes.

The same logic applies now to the Democrats’—and many Republicans’—insistence that America be flooded with Afghan “refugees.” Importing as many immigrants as possible, from cultures as alien to traditional America as possible, is the ruling class’s top priority, after protecting its own wealth and power. But since importing millions upon millions of foreigners is the primary tool by which the ruling class maintains that wealth and power—by suppressing wage growth and dividing the population—it can be hard to disaggregate these two priorities.

The parallels between the two crises are obvious. Just as ruling class hubris, incompetence, dishonesty, and greed created the financial crisis, so did a similar combination produce the mess in Afghanistan. There is no need to rehash the “higher” motives for the failure here. It is worth noting, however, that lower motives were not absent: a lot of people were making a lot of money off that war.

And now, just like thirteen years ago, our rulers want to use a crisis they created as justification to ram through what they always wanted to do anyway. Which, in this case, is to resettle a hundred or two hundred thousand (the number varies depending on who’s speaking) foreigners with no tradition of liberty—who are indeed from a culture deeply alien, even hostile to, Western civilizational norms—in your communities.

The justification for this is already being trumpeted: we must save our “allies,” translators and such, who helped us throughout our twenty-year failed experiment. This argument, though offered in bad faith, is effective because the vast majority of American consider abandoning an ally to a deadly enemy dishonorable.

But does anyone really believe that America has, or ever had—even over the duration of two decades—200,000 “allies” in Afghanistan? That we ever employed even a fraction of that number as translators? The claim is risible on its face.

The regime has in any case already admitted that, of the roughly 111,600 Afghans (as compared to 5,400 American citizens) already evacuated, it has no idea who the vast majority of them are. Our masters tell us that we must save “allies” and “translators”—and then in the next breath admit that they’re indiscriminately taking anyone. People who act and speak this brazenly do so out of a deep reservoir of contempt and hatred. The message is “We can do and say whatever we want; we can lie and contradict ourselves within the same sentence, and there’s nothing you can do about it. In fact, if you object, or even notice, we will use our power to crush you.”

There surely are some translators or others who really did help American forces and who deserve to be evacuated. If Americans could trust their government to establish and operate a serious vetting system to identify those truly worthy of resettlement—vouched for, say, by two or more of our soldiers who worked directly with the applicant in the field—most would support refugee status for such people. But they would number at most in the thousands, not the hundreds of thousands currently in process of resettlement.

But Americans don’t trust their government to do any such thing, nor should we. We know full well that the state will lie to our faces about vetting, numbers, and everything else. We will end up getting, if the regime gets its way, people who’ve undergone little or no vetting, many of them military-aged males, many others soon to be, and still others who are active enemies. For another little detail the regime has been forced to admit is that America has already evacuated figures known to be on terror watch lists. This toxic combination of absent and incompetent vetting means we will end up importing thousands of people who pose a danger to our citizens and to our way of life.

Beyond those (few) genuine allies and translators, America has no obligation to bring over “refugees” at all. Those who claim such a reason on the basis of Colin Powell’s “Pottery Barn rule”—“you break it, you bought it,” a rule that Pottery Barn does not actually impose—are incoherent. For by this logic, the United States is perpetually bound to compound its worst disasters with further deliberate errors: wreck a country, import its citizens. Or is that simply the plan?

Instead of “you break it, you bought it,” how about, “when you’re in a hole, stop digging”? Why do 2,500 American deaths, 20,000 injuries, and $2 trillion in losses obligate us to take on additional problems and burdens? How do our genuine obligations to a few hundred translators extend across an entire population of more than 37 million? Such arguments are a combination of sophistry and guilt-trip, in the service of ruling class pieties and political (and pecuniary) interests.

It’s far from self-evident that the war made Afghanistan worse. This was not like the wholesale destruction of Germany and Japan—industrialized countries with first-world infrastructure, leveled almost to the bare ground. Afghanistan was a premodern throwback before we got there and remains one today. If anything, much of that $2 trillion built far more than our drones and JDAMs destroyed. But according to one (if the only one) of the standards our ruling class set for itself—better, more modern schools, hospitals and other facilities—Afghanistan is today better off than it was in 2001. So whence arises this alleged obligation to resettle Afghans in America?

As for the Afghans killed in the war, many—likely most—were enemies. Or would those arguing for refugees now deny that? Doing so bolsters their pro-refugee argument—we busted their country so we owe them!—but eviscerates their pro-war argument. You mean we weren’t over there killing dangerous terrorists after all? Yes, there was collateral damage. But let those aforementioned 2,500 American deaths, 20,000 injuries and $2 trillion stand as compensation.

In contrast to all this, there are many, and compelling, reasons not to take in Afghan refugees.

First and foremost, America has massive problems here at home. Ours is not the competent, confident, prosperous country of the mid-twentieth century, with its patriotic and capable leadership. We are instead a decaying, half-broken society littered with dying communities, withering industries, and neglected, even despised, citizens. America very badly needs to get its own house in order—and fast. Our priorities should be to secure our borders, rebuild our industrial base, combat “deaths of despair” by giving ordinary people reason to hope, reform our increasingly anti-white education system, de-financialize the economy, and much else. With so many urgent problems to address at home, we don’t have the capacity to absorb hundreds of thousands of refugees—especially with the ongoing crisis at our southern border. We need to serve the interests of American citizens first.

Second, cultural compatibility matters. A 2013 Pew survey (i.e., conducted 12 years into our attempt to “democratize” Afghanistan) found that 99 percent of Afghans want sharia to be the law of their land. Sharia is about as far from American constitutionalism and law as you can get. We couldn’t make Afghans into liberal democrats over there; what makes us think we can do it here?

If there must be resettlement of those Afghans at genuine risk, but who contributed nothing to our war effort, they should be resettled in the most time-honored and logical fashion. I.e., they should go to countries closest to Afghanistan, where culture, language and customs are most similar, and from which it will be easiest for them to return home when conditions permit.

Third, a 2017 article by Cheryl Benard, the wife of a former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan—a man himself Afghan-born—detailed how Afghan refugees have the worst crime and public assistance rates of all refugee groups in Europe. She admitted the article was painful to write but argued that the truth needed to be known. Why would we willingly, knowingly import more crime and poverty? Don’t we have plenty of both already?

A related, and disturbing, point: a great many American servicemembers deployed to Afghanistan observed how frequently Afghans, including many of our so-called “allies,” sexually abused Afghan boys, in many cases on American bases. Those Americans who complained or even pointed it out were ordered by their superiors to look the other way because “that’s their culture.”

You may shake your head at this example of relativism run amok. But we both know full well that the regime will couple—already is coupling—“that’s their culture” with furious accusations of “racism” against anyone who dares point out the problem. “They don’t do that, you bigot, and it’s fine that they do.”

To ask an indelicate but necessary question: among the 111,600 unvetted Afghans we’ve evacuated so far, how many are pederasts? Our government has no idea and doesn’t seem to care. But it cares if you care. If you do, it knows you are a “racist.” One vile, hatemongering (Republican) Congressman even says your concerns about Afghan refugees make you “evil.”

Here is the most important paragraph from Benard’s article:

This brings us to a third, more compelling and quite disturbing theory—the one that my Afghan friend, the court translator, puts forward. On the basis of his hundreds of interactions with these young men in his professional capacity over the past several years, he believes to have discovered that they are motivated by a deep and abiding contempt for Western civilization. To them, Europeans are the enemy, and their women are legitimate spoils, as are all the other things one can take from them: housing, money, passports. Their laws don’t matter, their culture is uninteresting and, ultimately, their civilization is going to fall anyway to the horde of which one is the spearhead. No need to assimilate, or work hard, or try to build a decent life here for yourself—these Europeans are too soft to seriously punish you for a transgression, and their days are numbered.

Since Obama’s second term at least, and intensifying in the wake of the George Floyd riots, American officialdom has been passionately committed to leniency—for certain groups. Government at nearly all levels seems uninterested in, or even in favor of, lawbreaking not committed by white men. Many prominent voices in society now say openly that other, less “privileged” demographics cannot be responsible for any harm they do because its sole cause is their “oppression.”

Hence how hard is it to imagine some of our resettled Afghan “allies” committing, on our soil, against our kids, the same sorts of atrocities they take as their birthright in their homeland? Should we then expect punishment from American officials who cannot bring themselves to admit that a sainted refugee of another race and faith could possibly be responsible for his actions? But we can be sure of one thing: if an outraged father snaps and takes the law into his own hands, the state will crush him like a bug, instantly.

Mass resettlement of Afghans would thus seem to be a recipe for social chaos and unrest greater than any America has yet experienced—precisely at a time when we’re already experiencing the most since the 1960s. Who would choose this for their own country? We can be forgiven for assuming that our rulers are intentionally trying to hurt us.

Indeed, I don’t think that possibility can be altogether ruled out. Shortly after the Afghan withdrawal debacle became impossible for even the most brazenly dishonest regime hack to deny or spin, one of them shifted tactics: “Afghanistan,” he thundered, “is your fault.” By “your,” he meant ours—yours and mine, the American people’s.

The ruling class is angry that the people demanded an end to their idiotic, life-wasting failed experiment. They’re embarrassed at having been exposed as fools and failures. Some are bitter that the war-profiteering gravy train that kept them so well-fed for so long has come to an abrupt and ignominious end.

Instead of taking stock and asking themselves tough, necessary questions, they’re lashing out. They want to punish us for our justified doubts and lack of enthusiasm. They want to deflect blame for their own failure. They know, or should, that taking in refugees from a very poor, very tribal, very backward, very extremist society is a recipe for disaster. But they also know that none of these “refugees,” you can bet, will be settled in Cambridge, or the Vineyard, or the Upper West Side, or Georgetown, or Chevy Chase or McLean, or Berkeley or Palo Alto, or Santa Monica or Silverlake.

No, they’ll be going to heartland communities where what’s left of the middle class lives, to put stress on local schools, hospitals, police departments and other social services. And allowed to live as they damned-well please, free of the laws and regulations that tie honest citizens in knots, that are only enforced against us.

It’s hard not to conclude that our government hates us. That conclusion, at any rate, fits the observable facts of its actual behavior.

Is Afghanistan Impeachable?

There have been a host of calls on the Right to impeach the Occupant of the White House for bungling the Afghanistan exit. (I’m using that polite term in place of a host of more proper, but ultimately inflammatory expressions for what actually happened.) There have been a similar number of statements on the Left about how wonderful it was that the Ice Cream Monster ended “America’s Longest War.”

Any difficulties were due to a brain freeze and will be rectified as soon as the Taliban set up a properly diverse government.

Sober legal minds have actually suggested that, while other acts of his might be impeachable, this foreign policy act is purely within his cognizance (Does he still have a cognitive to have cognizance?), and thus is not subject to Congressional review.

His insistence on an unconstitutional eviction moratorium is just one clear example of violating the Constitution he swore to uphold. But that’s not a (General) Willey-Nilly dash for the airport. Rocky Road Joe does hold the title of Commander-in-Chief, so it’s up to him.

If we go back to the debates over the Constitution, we find that impeachment of a President was not a controversial issue. It was widely thought to be a good check on a bad Chief Executive. The Constitution needed a provision “for defending the community against the incapacity, negligence, or perfidy of the Chief Magistrate.”

It wasn’t good enough to wait for the next election, because, as James Madison noted, “He might pervert his administration into a scheme of peculation (embezzlement) or oppression. He might betray his trust to foreign powers.” This easily led to bribery or treason as grounds for impeachment. But soon it was realized that this wasn’t enough. There were too many opportunities for evil in the President’s office. Smithsonian Magazine notes:

“The Virginia delegates [Mason, Madison, & Randolph] borrowed their model for impeachment from the British Parliament. For 400 years, English lawmakers had used impeachment to exercise some control over the king’s ministers. Often, Parliament invoked it to check abuses of power, including improprieties and attempts to subvert the state. The House of Commons’ 1640 articles of impeachment against Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford, alleged “that he… hath traiterously endeavored to subvert the Fundamental Laws and Government of the Realms… and in stead thereof, to introduce Arbitrary and Tyrannical Government against Law.” (The House of Lords convicted Strafford, who was hanged in 1641.)”

We should note that the key issues are not “misadministration,” which was soundly rejected as a cause for impeachment. After all, being incompetent is not a crime. Electing Jimmy Carter was simply a mistake. Rather, the concern was “improprieties and attempts to subvert the state.”

Numerous writers have noted Biden’s installation of Executive officers who are manifestly hostile to the Constitution. Near-blackmail by the Attorney General against the Arizona election audit comes to mind. The now-rescinded nomination of David Chipman, a rabid anti-Second Amendment activist to head the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives is of a similar kind.

But all that must take a back seat to one key problem with the occupant of the White House. Among his duties are a specific mandate in Article II, section 3. “He shall take care that the Laws be faithfully executed.”

In short, Joe Biden does not have the authority to waive any law. In fact, failure to oversee that the Department of Justice to be certain that it properly enforces all laws without regard for status should constitute a breach of this “take care clause.”

On that ground, Donald Trump could have been impeached for failing to bring criminal charges against Hillary Clinton, James Comey and several others. He’s out of office, so our attention should be drawn to Hunter Biden’s laptop and his blatant lie on Form 4473 declaring he had never used drugs.

Returning to Central Asia, the take care clause envelopes the abandonment of American citizens. We can’t bring a charge based on his C in C failures. But we can look at Biden’s failure to follow the law. And in this case, we look at the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act. It declares (section 1215) that the President cannot reduce troop levels in Afghanistan below set levels.

He is allowed to waive that restriction by written notice to Congress that includes a detailed explanation of how the reduction serves national security interests. So far, so good. Biden sent a letter on June 8. Supposedly that was all Congress was entitled to.

But section 1215(b) can’t be waived. It requires a detailed report to Congress, which can be to Committees that meet under security protocols, that details risks to our counter-terrorism mission, our personnel, NATO partners, and so on. The list is long and detailed, but the President chose to ignore that part of the law. That is impeachable under the take care clause. It also becomes impeachable because of how the withdrawal has been mismanaged.

The letter Biden sent includes worthless platitudes. “We will withdraw responsibly, deliberately, and safely, in full coordination with our allies and partners. Our NATO allies and operational partners, who have stood shoulder-to-shoulder with us for almost 20 years and who have also made great sacrifices, will now withdraw alongside our forces as we stand by our enduring principle of “in together, out together.””

This promise was worthless, as our troops departed in the dark of night, with no notice to our allies. That is also why, in an unprecedented move, the British Parliament held Joe Biden in contempt.

It may seem a bit arcane to use such a cause to impeach the Occupant. But this is real and substantial, unlike a simple phone call to a foreign President or a riot that was not incited by President Trump. Joe Biden has betrayed our trust in multiple ways. This could be the means to remove him, even if it isn’t because of his other malfeasance. We got Al Capone for tax evasion, not his other criminal endeavors. But with Democrats in the House and Senate, I’m not holding my breath.

Is Afghanistan Impeachable?

Leaked White House Notes From Situation Room Meeting Day Before Kabul Fell Reveals Biden’s Afghan Failures

Someone in the Biden Admin is leaking documents to the media…

Leaked White House notes from the Situation Room meeting one day before Kabul fell obtained by Axios reveals just how unprepared Joe Biden was for the Afghanistan withdrawal.

According to the notes, the Biden Regime was scrambling at the 11th hour and had just barely notified Afghan allies “to begin to register their interest in relocation to the United States” hours before the Taliban took over.

The Biden Regime was so unprepared that they were still determining which transit points to send evacuees to hours before the Taliban descended on Kabul.

Axios reported:

Leaked notes from a White House Situation Room meeting the day before Kabul fell shed new light on just how unprepared the Biden administration was to evacuate Afghan nationals who’d helped the United States in its 20-year war against the Taliban.

The details: Axios obtained the NSC’s “summary of conclusions” for a meeting of the so-called Deputies Small Group.

It assembles top aides to various Cabinet members, and usually lays the groundwork for Deputies’ or Principals’ sessions, or works out practical details for executing decisions already made by their bosses.

The document regarded “Relocations out of Afghanistan,” and the meeting was held from 3:30-4:30pm on the afternoon of Aug. 14, Washington time.

At that moment, Taliban fighters were descending upon Kabul.

The meeting was chaired by National Security Council official Liz Sherwood-Randall and included senior officials across multiple agencies, including Gen. John Hyten, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Between the lines: The meeting notes highlight how many crucial actions the Biden administration was deciding at the last minute — just hours before Kabul would fall and former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani would flee his palace in a helicopter.Action items decided in meeting included:“State will work to identify as many countries as possible to serve as transit points. Transit points need to be able to accommodate U.S. citizens, Afghan nationals, third country nationals, and other evacuees. (Action: State, immediately)”

“Embassy Kabul will notify LES [locally employed staff] to begin to register their interest in relocation to the United States and begin to prepare immediately for departure… (Action: Embassy Kabul, immediately)”

The inept Biden Regime was caught off guard by how quickly the Taliban moved in and took over.

Because of Joe Biden’s corruption and bad decisions, 13 US service members were killed by a suicide bomber in Kabul.

Via Axios:

Behind the scenes: By the time the Saturday afternoon meeting happened, senior Biden officials across the government had been meeting around the clock to deal with the high-speed unraveling of Afghanistan.

The administration had taken some measures that would help them ultimately evacuate more than 120,000 people out of Kabul airport by Aug. 31 — the president’s revised withdrawal deadline.

Amid chaos and death, the effort to remove both U.S. citizens and cooperative Afghan nationals was executed in partnership with allies and many desperate improvised efforts from the private sector and veterans groups.

Troops were pre-positioned in the region so they could get quickly to Kabul airport to run the evacuation. The administration had accelerated the Special Immigrant Visa [SIV] approvals. And Biden officials had explored with other countries the possibilities of them serving as transit points for evacuees — which ultimately led to a network that hosted tens of thousands of Afghans waiting for processing.

Nonetheless, many of the key decisions hadn’t been made on the eve of Kabul’s fall.

The decision to abandon Baghram and all its resources was the lynchpin of the debacle. That decision was treason. From that moment on, nothing except reinvasion was going to save the thousands who will continue to be hunted down, tortured and killed and their daughters systematically raped and enslaved by the Taliban.

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joe biden makes a claim the US military withdrawal from Afghanistan was an “extraordinary success.”

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Last edited 2 years ago by TrumpWon

I really enjoyed all your comments.
But especially this one from 4 months ago:

There is an emerging narrative that the taliban is trustworthy based on a false narrative that they were instrumental in the evacuation of 122k people.

Just this week I saw a new narrative trying to make the taliban look better.
Some Aussie woman working in one of the Emerites states got pregnant.
It is illegal for an unmarried woman to be in that country if she is pregnent so she has to leave.
Austrailia won’t let her back home because she’s not up on her vaccinations and is refusing to get any jabs while pregnant.
So, the taliban offered to allow her to live “freely” in Afghanistan!
And this is getting reported all over the place.
See, how nice these taliban people are?!

Last edited 2 years ago by Nan G

This entire regime thinks their total job is nothing but standing around and posing for photos. Not a one of them is doing their job and the results demonstrate their incompetence.