During the 2007 Dem primaries, Biden attacked Obama for adopting his position on Afghanistan.
The flailing Biden campaign put out a press release accusing Obama of
being a “johnny-come-lately” who had belatedly adopted Biden’s push for
“significantly increasing reconstruction assistance” and sending more
American soldiers to Afghanistan.
While running for president, Biden had based his entire foreign
policy around sending more troops to Afghanistan. He had memorized one
line, “if we’re surging troops anywhere, it should be in Afghanistan”,
and repeated it in the Senate, in interviews, and on the campaign trail.
Sending more troops to Afghanistan, he argued would give America “the moral high ground”.
“The next president of the United States will have to rally the
American people and the world to fight them over there, unless we want
to fight them over here. But the over there is not, as President Bush
has falsely and repeatedly claimed, in Iraq, but it’s rather in the
border areas between Afghanistan and Pakistan,” he insisted at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Biden attacked not only Democrat rivals like Obama, but also
President Bush, for not wanting to send more troops to Afghanistan. “I
asked the commander of British forces how long his people would allow
him to stay in Afghanistan. And he said, ‘Senator, we Brits have an
expression. As long as the big dog is in the pen, the small dogs will
stay. When the big dog leaves, the small dogs leave as well.’ Well,
guess what? The big dog left in 2002.”
He was only off by 19 years. Biden was preemptively accusing Bush of his own sins.
By the 2020 primaries, Biden had completely reinvented his entire history with Afghanistan.
“I’m the guy from the beginning who argued that it was a big, big
mistake to surge forces to Afghanistan. Period. We should not have done
it. And I argued against it constantly,” he falsely claimed.
Biden had gone from attacking Obama for ripping off his idea of
surging forces to Afghanistan to being the guy who “from the beginning”
had opposed the idea.
The idea that Biden opposed “from the beginning” was the one he originally claimed credit for.
That was quite a turnaround for
the fraudster who had spent his previous presidential campaign
declaring, “If we’re surging troops anywhere, it should be in
Afghanistan.”
Biden, one of the co-sponsors of the Afghanistan Freedom Support Act,
which began the nation-building push in that country, also claimed that
he was against nation-building.
“Our mission in Afghanistan was never supposed to be
nation-building,” Biden claimed in his recent failed speech after Kabul
turned into Saigon.
Afghanistan should not have been about nation-building, but Biden was
the loudest voice in support of turning the mission into
nation-building. At one hearing he even complained that, “The original
Marshall Plan cost $90 billion in today’s dollars. Our total pledge for
Afghan reconstruction is less than 1 percent of that, and we’ve only
delivered a fraction of this pledge.”
He attacked Bush, whining that his “follow-through commitment to
Afghanistan, Afghanistan’s security and reconstruction has fallen very
short.”
Back in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Biden had insisted
that, “We have to get moving on reconstruction. We need more funds, and
we need to use them better. The Afghans are patient, but they’re not
seeing reconstruction worthy of a superpower.”
After Biden failed miserably in the primaries, Obama picked his most
inept rival to pad out his ticket with an old confused white man. And
Biden tried to out-hawk John McCain on Afghanistan. When that failed
miserably, he turned to making up stories of his own heroism in
Afghanistan. The stories were as true as anything else that came out of
his mouth.
“If you want to know where al Qaeda lives, you want to know where bin
Laden is, come back to Afghanistan with me,” he boasted. “Come back to
the area where my helicopter was forced down with a three-star general
and three senators at 10,500 feet in the middle of those mountains. I
can tell you where they are.”
Despite having this intimate knowledge of where bin Laden and Al
Qaeda were, Biden never went back to Afghanistan to hunt them down.
That’s probably because Osama bin Laden was safe in a Pakistani military
town. Biden’s helicopter, which also carried his Senate colleagues,
future Secretary of State John Kerry and future Secretary of Defense
Chuck Hagel, landed because of a snowstorm. “Other than getting a little
cold, it was fine,” Kerry later said. “We were going to send Biden out
to fight the Taliban with snowballs.”
The joke, as usual, was on Joe Biden.
“The superhighway of terror between Pakistan and Afghanistan where my
helicopter was forced down. John McCain wants to know where bin Laden
and the gates of Hell are? I can tell him where. That’s where Al Qaida
is. That’s where bin Laden is,” Biden claimed at a fundraiser.
Biden and the other Senate members were not in Taliban territory.
Heavily guarded and in airspace protected by a F-16 fighter, they waited
while a convoy took them to Bagram Air Base. That’s the same base that
Biden would irresponsibly abandon, cutting off Americans trapped in
Afghanistan from being able to get out without the permission of the
Taliban.
Biden could have given credit to
the men of the Arizona National Guard’s 1st Battalion who traveled
through the “bitter winds, freezing rain and snow for more than 15
hours” to transport him out. Instead he pretended that he was some sort
of hero for sitting in a warm chopper.
And now, Biden could have considered the thousands of Americans
trapped in Afghanistan, when he gave the fatal order to pull out
military forces without evacuating them. When he was on that mountain,
American soldiers traveled through difficult weather to get him out. But
when Americans, some of them veterans, are trapped in Afghanistan, he
turned his back on them.
Obama adopted Biden’s proposal for an Afghan troop surge with
disastrous results. American forces in Afghanistan were quadrupled to
100,000 while preventing them from fighting back so as not to alienate
Muslims. 1,200 American soldiers died during the disastrous Afghanistan
surge. And Biden, who had pushed the whole thing, ran the other way.
After taking credit for selling Obama on an Afghan surge, Biden
rebranded as a skeptic of sending more troops to Afghanistan. By the
2012 election, Biden was running against his own Afghanistan position,
and castigating Rep. Paul Ryan for wanting a conditions-based
withdrawal. Meanwhile, Biden kept bragging about his expertise on
Afghanistan.
“I’ve been up in the Kunar Valley. I’ve been throughout that whole
country, mostly in a helicopter, and sometimes in a vehicle,” he
claimed.
“What we also want it do is make sure that we’re not projecting
weakness abroad, and that’s what’s happening here,” Ryan warned. Biden
dismissed any such notion.
Obama and Biden promised a withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2014. It did not happen.
That’s been true of the vast majority of Biden’s promises.
When it comes to Afghanistan, Biden was usually for most things
before then turning around and being against them. Biden had sold the
D.C. political class on the idea that he was some sort of foreign policy
expert based on Afghanistan when he actually had no idea what he was
doing. He had jumped on the Afghanistan bandwagon after September 11
while scrambling for an approach that would build up his presidential
credentials.
His initial response was,
“This would be a good time to send, no strings attached, a check for
$200 million to Iran.” But after that disastrous idea, Biden zeroed in
on Afghanistan.
He constantly championed more troops and funding for Afghanistan.
“If we fail in Afghanistan, we are going to be talking about, in my
view, a country seven times as big, with nuclear weapons sitting on one
border, and a country that is, in its present security leadership,
hostile to the United States on another border, with more than seven
times, probably–I guess it’s probably 14 to 15 times the population,
seeking nuclear weapons,” Biden argued at one Senate hearing in favor of
expanding military forces in Afghanistan.
“We’re in for, as they say on the east side of Wilmington, Delaware,
a world of hurt that has nothing to do with terrorism, that goes far
beyond terror, far beyond terror. So I hope you’re here to tell us the
good news about your overwhelming enthusiasm supporting expanding ISAF.”
Even completely dishonest politicians have the right to change their
minds. Or at least pretend to have changed them. But Biden adopted the
opposite position of the one he ran on while claiming that he had always
“from the beginning” opposed the things he supported.
This behavior was not the mark of a responsible leader, but a clueless con artist.
That’s exactly what Biden always was. And it’s what his disaster in
Afghanistan has plainly revealed him to be even to his passionate
supporters in media.
Biden claimed to know all about Afghanistan. In reality he knew
nothing. He leaped from one radical position, surging troops to
Afghanistan, to the opposite extreme, withdrawing the troops before
evacuating the civilians. The result was a horrifying national security
disaster.
And the same media which has temporarily turned on Biden let it happen.
Biden’s dishonesty and ignorance were well known to the press corps.
They chose to cover it up and lie about it because they wanted him to
win. Now some of them are feigning outrage that the lying hack they
championed could have unleashed such an inexplicable disaster.
Biden had contradicted himself again and again on Afghanistan because
he didn’t believe anything coming out of his own mouth. That’s how the
politician who once predicted, “If Afghanistan falls, I’m not sure how
far behind NATO will be” was the one who fell.
The problem wasn’t that Biden had the wrong views, it’s that he was
the typical case of a D.C. echo chamber politician who repeated whatever
slogan he thought would get him ahead.
He had no plan for carrying any of his proposals out. All he could do was indict himself.
“Ousting the Taliban is only the first step in a long process.
Everyone knows we can remove an evil regime. The question is, are we
willing to expend the security, financial, diplomatic, and political
resources to make the successor regime a success?” Biden once asked at a
hearing. “The U.S. has power–but do we have staying power?”
Biden has since answered his own question.