Few ‘happy things’ ahead for Afghans after US exit

Posted By : Telegraf
10 Min Read

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When a reporter in early July asked Joe Biden a question about the war in Afghanistan, the US president sniped back, saying, “I want to talk about happy things, man.” Biden revealed, perhaps unintentionally, that the situation in Afghanistan is anything but a happy topic. It might have been one of the most revealing responses from a sitting president about the longest-running war in modern United States history.

The president shifted focus, saying, “The economy is growing faster than any time in 40 years, we’ve got a record number of new jobs, Covid deaths are down 90%, wages are up faster than any time in 15 years, we’re bringing our troops home.”

So the war’s end is merely the icing on the cake he is seemingly gifting the American public: an end to a war in addition to peace, prosperity, and health at home (even if such achievements are more marketing than reality).

At the very least, one can give Biden credit for formally ending the US role in the war, even if he had nothing substantive to say about the devastation we Americans have wrought over the years.

Members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus said they “commend President Biden for fulfilling his commitment to ending the longest war in American history” and took his withdrawal of troops to mean that “there is no military solution in Afghanistan.” (They made no mention of Biden’s role during Barack Obama’s presidency in prolonging the war.)

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