https://townhall.com/tipsheet/guyben...rests-n2595063
THE REALITY of fiden 's  AFGHANUISTAN  Debacle
 
 
       
 
  A few appalling soundbytes in an ocean of appalling soundbytes from  Biden officials trying to spin away what they've done.  In a matter of  days, Team Biden has shifted from 
'we won't leave our people behind' to 
'how dare you use the word stranded?' to 
'listen, these strandings were expected, normal, and not really a big deal.'  Let's review the tape.  President Biden 
promised repeatedly, including 
less than two weeks ago, that the United States would get its citizens and allies out of Afghanistan before our military fully withdrew:
June: 
President  Joe Biden vowed on Thursday that Afghans who helped the U.S. military  “are not going to be left behind” as his administration stepped up  planning to evacuate thousands of Afghan interpreters while their  applications for U.S. entry are processed...“They’re going to come,”  Biden said in an exchange with reporters after an event to highlight a  bipartisan agreement reached on infrastructure legislation. “We’ve  already begun the process. Those who helped us are not going to be left behind.” 
August: 
President Joe Biden pledged firmly Friday to bring all Americans home from Afghanistan — and all Afghans who aided the war effort, too...“We’re making the same commitment” to Afghan wartime helpers as  to U.S. citizens, Biden said, offering the prospect of assistance to  Afghans who largely have been fighting individual battles to get the  documents and passage into the airport that they need to leave. He called the Afghan allies “equally important” in the evacuations.
And  now? The administration admits that perhaps hundreds of Americans who  wanted to leave have been left behind, along with tens of thousands of  Afghans who helped the US and NATO allies over the years.  Just last  week, Jen Psaki upbraided Fox's Peter Doocy for calling these people  "stranded." Now an another administration spokesman 
is himself using that word while trying to downplay the abandonment:
No,  we do not actively strand Americans and allies in a countries overrun  by militant Islamists, after explicitly committing not to do so, "all  the time" -- and any attempt to normalize what just happened is shameful  gaslighting.  The solemn oath the president made had nothing to do what  he would have "liked and preferred."  It was a firm vow that was  violated.  We 
could have gotten everyone out, too.  That would  have required a much better plan, executed over a period of months.  It  would have required not 
rejecting a Taliban offer  for the US to control Kabul during the final weeks of the withdrawal.   It would have required not fanatically sticking to an arbitrary  deadline.  "The time just wasn't there," Kirby says, pretending as  though August 31 was forever etched in stone, and hoping people won't  remember that even under the time frame he cites, the US chose to  retreat 24 hours early.  Even worse 
is this line from National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan:
I  saw the pull quote on Twitter, but made sure to watch the actual clip  to confirm that he actually asserted that the promise-shattering  stranding was in the "best interests" of not just the US more broadly,  but 
of the stranded themselves.  And that's exactly what he  said.  Imagine being one of those Americans, or one of those US  interpreters who now faces death at the hands of terrorists.  Imagine  hearing a smug presidential aide explain to the world that the abject  betrayal and violated promise that has placed your family's lives in  grave danger was really about your "best interests."  
Sullivan goes on to say  that leaving people behind was unanimously endorsed by the president's  entire national security team -- and just in case anyone had missed his  meaning, he states again that "the best way to help [the stranded] was  to transition this mission," by which he means leaving them behind.  I  wonder if Jake Sullivan would agree with that assessment if Jake  Sullivan were one of the people stuck on the ground as the final US  aircraft took off yesterday.
He says the critics aren't the ones  who have to sit in the Situation Room and make "the hard calls," like  abandoning thousands of people we promised not abandon.  The premise  here is that all of this was sprung on Biden the bystander, who had to  muddle through a chaotic situation over which he wielded no control.   But Biden and his team have presided over all it, making every decision  that precipitated this disaster.  This is their policy and their  execution, full stop.  Also, note 
this little piece of framing from yet another Biden administration mouthpiece:
"Those who stayed."  Like 
these people who "
stayed"?
As for the "low hundreds" number that the administration keeps repeating, as if it's an achievement, Stephen Hayes 
told me yesterday that he doesn't believe it.  Neither do I.  And neither, it seems, does Matt Lewis:
   

  Recommended
 
 Mother of Marine Killed in Kabul Attack Has a Message for Biden Voters   Matt Vespa 
 
 
 
A couple of weeks ago, the Biden administration was  saying there were 10,000 to 15,000 U.S. citizens in Afghanistan. As  recently as last week, The Washington Post was citing that number. Then, all of a sudden, the Biden administration began saying that there were just 6,000 U.S. citizens (“who wanted to leave”) as of August 14. After accounting for the current evacuations, that meant there would be just a few hundred Americans left in Afghanistan. Not everyone is buying it, though. Michael Pregent,  a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute (a conservative think tank  based in Washington, D.C.) and a former intelligence officer, disputes  the administration’s numbers. “Thousands of Americans remain in Afghanistan that want to leave,” he tweeted. “This  ‘hundreds left’ is political math. We shouldn’t leave 1 behind, but  lying about the numbers abandons hope for thousands of Americans trying  to get out.” I asked Pregent what he meant by political math,  and he told me that anyone left behind will be put in the “chose to  stay” category. If he’s right, this would be a huge scandal. A simpler  and less sinister explanation is that this boils down to gross  incompetence on the part of the Biden administration. 
I'll leave you 
with this, which touches on a group of Americans that the administration's dubious 'stranded' math excludes:
"Do not rely on U.S. government assistance" is a fitting, harrowing sentence.