The media is lambasting Biden over Afghanistan. He should stand firm

Authored by theguardian.com and submitted by hugeposuer

When Joe Biden, a conventional politician if there ever was one, said he was concluding the withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan this month, in line with plans set in motion by the Trump administration, the response from the mainstream press was hostile. Following the Taliban takeover of the country, the tenor has only grown more hyperbolic.

During the Trump years, publications like the New York Times and Washington Post presented themselves as the last defenses of freedom against creeping authoritarianism. The latter adopted a new slogan, “Democracy dies in darkness”, and spent millions on a Super Bowl ad featuring Tom Hanks extolling the importance of journalism as a profession.

But for all this talk of “defending freedom”, the mainstream media has a history of reflexively defending militarism, foreign interventions and occupations. Biden – who dared fulfil a campaign promise and end America’s longest war – is learning this the hard way.

As Eric Levitz recounts in New York Magazine, the media has created a public backlash against Biden, with outlets like the Times calling the withdrawal a humiliating fiasco. For the New York Times Editorial Board, the two-decade occupation of Afghanistan is described as a “nation-building project” that reflected “the enduring American faith in the values of freedom and democracy”.

Key to the media narrative is the echoing of “experts” on Afghanistan like former ambassador Ryan C Crocker, who wishes in another Times op-ed that instead of bolting after a couple of decades, US troops might have remained in Afghanistan for more than a half-century, as we’ve done on the Korean peninsula. Crocker regrets that “Mr Biden’s decision to withdraw all US forces destroyed an affordable status quo that could have lasted indefinitely at a minimum cost in blood and treasure”.

But as the writer Jeet Heer points out, the status quo was far from “affordable” for ordinary Afghans. The tragic figure of more than 2,000 dead US troops pales in comparison to the more than 200,000 Afghans killed since 2001. Indeed, prolonged civil war has put this year on pace to be the bloodiest for civilians as a failed US client state has overseen plummeting social indicators, widespread corruption and a total breakdown in public safety.

The media had ignored the mounting chaos for years, only to laser-focus on it as a means to criticize Biden. They’ve ignored their own role in cheerleading a misguided “War on Terror” and pinned the blame for two decades of imperial hubris on the president who finally made good on promises to leave the country against the wishes of even some in his own party.

What’s underlying much of the approach is a mainstream media fidelity to “expert” consensus. Many who presented themselves as fierce truth-tellers in the face of Trump hold the opinions of former intelligence and military officials in higher regard than that of a president democratically elected by 81.3 million people and pursuing a policy supported by 70% of Americans.

Not only are corporate media pundits and talking heads wrong to advocate staying in Afghanistan, they’ve been wrong about generations of conflicts that ordinary people have opposed. Contrary to the popular imagination, opposition to wars from Vietnam to Iraq were spearheaded by workers, not the rich and the professional classes that serve them. It’s this general aversion to costly overseas conflict that the president should confidently embrace.

Biden has never been a very good populist. For all his “Amtrak Joe” pretenses, he’s a creature of the Beltway, the ultimate establishment politician. It’s no surprise that his administration appears paralyzed in the face of criticism from its erstwhile elite allies. But unless he manages to push back against the narratives mounting against his administration, he’ll risk undermining his popular domestic agenda as well.

Joe Biden did something good – and the media want to kill him for it. He should embrace their scorn and defend his actions to the American people.

Motorazr1 on August 30th, 2021 at 00:58 UTC »

Do you think think the Biden administration ordered the JCS and Pentagon brass to have their thumbs up their butts? The Pentagon had 14-months from the Trump agreement in February, 2020 until their deadline to be out of Afghanistan by June, 2021 and what we saw was all the military could manage even with two extra months provided by Biden. But Republicans want to blame Biden - not Trump, not the JCS and Pentagon, not the local commanders on the ground - just Biden alone for the failure. Seriously or just for talking points?

Do Republicans think the US should have destroyed a billion dollars-worth of military equipment and left the friendly Afghan forces with nothing to lose to the Taliban but also nothing to fight the Taliban with? They just want some vague magic plan and to hold Biden accountable for not having such a magic plan. That’s an impressive level of hubris.

With no Trump transition team in January, how many months did Biden have to prepare for the June pull-out (during a global pandemic)? Easy to armchair quarterback and say that the Biden administration should have “done something” in the few months they had (something besides stalling for two additional months trying to pull Trump’s disaster together). Trump had FOUR YEARS to set the stage, the Pentagon had 16-months, while Biden had only a few months AFTER the stage was already set.

perve79 on August 29th, 2021 at 16:01 UTC »

The media ignored this damn war for 20 years but now cares when we're finally leaving.

uping1965 on August 29th, 2021 at 14:49 UTC »

He is... He has made up his mind and in 2 more days it is over.