Biden will leave for Delaware tomorrow amid Afghan mess: only spent four of 15 days of crisis in DC
Biden to leave White House for Delaware tomorrow as Afghan mess rages and thousands of US citizens and Afghan allies remain stranded in Kabul: Has only spent four of 15 days of crisis in DC
Joe Biden on Saturday will once again depart Washington for his summer home in Delaware, meaning he has spent only four of the last 15 days in DCKamala Harris has also left DC: she will be in Singapore, Vietnam and California for the next weekThey are leaving Washington as the Afghanistan fiasco continues, with the pace of evacuations finally stepping up but chaotic scenes outside Kabul airportLloyd Austin, the Defense Secretary, said on Friday he was angered by reports of the Taliban beating U.S. citizens outside the airportTaliban fighters with truncheons and whips are beating people back from the airport area, and shots have been fired Biden on Friday said he had not heard the reports, and said al-Qaeda was defeated in Afghanistan – a statement rapidly contradicted by the Pentagon The U.S. government is still unsure how many Americans remain in the country: estimates suggest around 15,000 U.S. citizensBiden said on Wednesday that there were an additional 50-65,000 Afghans that they wanted to grant safe passage out of Afghanistan The president said on Friday that ‘any American who wants to get home will be brought home’ – even if it takes beyond the August 31 deadline Ramstein base in Germany is making further preparations to deal with the evacuees, after their Qatar base reached capacityThe evacuation airlift out of Kabul halted for several hours on Friday as Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar hit its capacity and the U.S. scrambled to find an alternative
Joe Biden will leave Washington DC on Saturday for his holiday home in Delaware – exiting the White House amid the biggest crisis of his presidency.
The president will have spent only four days in the last 15 in the White House since the Taliban took their first regional capital, with the rest of the time at Camp David or in Delaware.
His vice president, Kamala Harris, left DC on Friday night for an Asia tour. She will be absent from Washington for a week, visiting Singapore, Vietnam and then California. Her office insisted she will continue to work on the Afghan crisis while she is in Asia.
Biden also has access to secure command and control centers at all locations he travels.
This comes after Biden’s widely panned speech from the White House that presented a reality totally at odds with what is going on in Afghanistan and at Kabul airport.
Indeed, minutes after Biden said the mission to destroy Al Qaeda in Afghanistan was a success and that he knew of no circumstances where Americans had been unable to reach Kabul airport, he was flatly contradicted by the Pentagon.
Joe Biden is seen with Kamala Harris on Friday afternoon, addressing the nation before she flew to Singapore. On Saturday he will depart for Wilmington, Delaware
Yes, Al Qaeda remains present in Afghanistan, said Department of Defense spokesman John Kirby during a briefing, and yes, he was aware of reports of Americans being beaten by the Taliban as they tried to reach safety.
The contradiction will raise further doubt about whether Biden is in control of the White House messaging operation, let alone the chaotic effort to bring Americans home.
He also flubbed while describing key communications with the Taliban, mangling the name of Doha, Qatar – a key focal point of negotiations as well as evacuations.
Asked about assurances of security for people making it to the airport, Biden responded: ‘We’ve been in constant contact with the Taliban leadership on the ground in Kabul, as well as the Taliban leadership in Daho’ – confusing the letters in the capital of Qatar.
‘And we’ve been coordinating what we’re doing,’ he added.
He did not immediately correct himself, but he later referred to the location correctly when defending the way the evacuation was handled. ‘The point was that although we were in contact with the Taliban and Doha for this whole period of time,’ there wasn’t expected to be a ‘total demise’ of the Afghan military, Biden said.
Doha is where the Trump administration held negotiations with members of the Taliban for a phased withdrawal of U.S. troops.
Biden is facing continuing criticism as videos and news reports depict pandemonium and occasional violence outside the airport.
‘I made the decision’ on the timing of the U.S. withdrawal, he said, his tone firm as he declared that it was going to lead to difficult scenes, no matter when. Former President Donald Trump had set the departure for May in negotiations with the Taliban, but Biden extended it.
Thousands of people remain to be evacuated ahead of Biden’s Aug. 31 deadline to withdraw most remaining U.S. troops. Flights were stopped for several hours Friday because of a backup at a transit point for the refugees, a U.S. airbase in Qatar, but they resumed in the afternoon, including to Bahrain.
Still, potential evacuees faced continuing problems getting into the airport. The Belgian foreign ministry confirmed that one of its planes took off empty because the people who were supposed to be aboard couldn’t get in.
Evacuees are seen arriving in an undisclosed Middle Eastern air base on Friday, having been flown on U.S. Air Force planes out of Kabul
A U.S. soldier looks on as a smiling Afghan man, carrying a child, leaves Kabul on Wednesday
The White House announced that Biden would leave for Wilmington around midday on Saturday, following a meeting with his national security team to get updated on the situation. Harris will join remotely.
But the president’s departure from DC for the weekend will be seized on by his critics, who have hammered Biden for the debacle in the war-torn country.
On Friday, evacuation flights were temporarily suspended when the Qatar air base which has, until now, been receiving the evacuees reached capacity.
One man at Al Udeid air base in Doha told CBS News that about 2,000 Afghans and U.S citizens were crowded into the building on Friday.
He said it was hot, and many people were waiting hours for food, but that he and the others who had made it that far were grateful to the U.S., and relieved to be out of Kabul.
Footage shared on social media showed crowded conditions at Al Udeid air base in Qatar
One man told CBS News that he thought there were 2,000 people sheltering in the air base
Commanders were forced to scramble to find an alternative, and on Friday hasty preparations were being made at Ramstein air base in Germany and Isa air base in Bahrain.
Isa has capacity to temporarily shelter up to 1,000 people, and the Bahraini authorities gave the U.S. permission to keep people there for onward processing for up to 14 days.
Other nations in the Persian Gulf are in discussion to host evacuees, including Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates where there are major USAF bases, according to Air Force Magazine.
Qatar was the ‘first way station’ for the evacuation, and as such it hit capacity quickly, said John Kirby, Pentagon spokesman, on Friday.
‘We are grateful other countries have already agreed to accept additional numbers, and we’re working out the details of that with them right now,’ Kirby said.
‘From a military perspective, we are in need of additional capacity and we’re grateful that other countries are going to be helping us out with that capacity.’
Cots were being laid out inside Ramstein air force base in Germany, as hasty preparations were made for an influx of Afghan and American evacuees
Temporary housing was being erected on the U.S. base in Germany in anticipation of the new arrivals from Kabul
Ramstein’s Twitter account showed images of the U.S. troops working hard to ready the facility for the incoming flights
In the 24 hours leading up to Friday’s pause, a total of 16 C-17s and one C-130 departed Hamid Karzai International Airport as part of the U.S. evacuation.
The planes were carrying a total of 6,000 evacuees – 5,000 of whom were Afghans and the remainder American.
U.S. Air Force crews adjusted their operations to fly even more passengers, and are now regularly carrying 400 people as opposed to a previous limit of just over 300 for humanitarian operations, said Brig. Gen. Daniel A. DeVoe, commander of Air Mobility Command’s 618th Air Operations Center.
Biden has given the order to fill the planes, after embarrassing images emerged earlier this week showing cavernous cargo planes with only a handful of people inside.
Furthermore, after Britain and France sent special forces into Kabul to extract their citizens – leading to questions why the U.S. was not doing the same – three U.S. CH-47 helicopters picked up 169 Americans a few hundred yards outside the Kabul airport. The Americans had been told to wait in a building for extraction.
A shocking image shows a near-empty evacuation flight taking the wife of an ex-Royal Marine commando out of Kabul as the Taliban block thousands of Afghans from entering the capital’s airport. Paul ‘Pen’ Farthing said on Twitter: ‘Kaisa is on her way home! BUT this aircraft is empty… scandalous as thousands wait outside #Kabul airport being crushed as they cannot get in. Sadly people will be left behind when this mission is over as we CANNOT get it right’
Footage shared on social media, which was unverified, showed crowds running outside what was believed to be Kabul airport
Biden said on Friday that he believed Americans were able to access Kabul airport unhindered, but social media footage like this suggested otherwise
Pandemonium unfolded at Kabul airport on Monday as thousands of people ran on to the runway in a desperate attempt to escape Taliban rule, fearing bloody reprisals by the Islamists
Thousands of Afghanis had raced on to the tarmac at Kabul airport before some jumped on the side of a US C-17 jet which was flying hundreds of diplomatic staff and visa holders out of the country
The White House is also struggling to control the damage from a series of conflicting statements on Friday – which saw Biden address the nation from the East Room and then, within 45 minutes, his Defense Secretary and Pentagon spokesman both say the president was incorrect.
In a remarkable sequence of events, Biden claimed that there were no reports of Americans having problems accessing Kabul airport, and then said al-Qaeda had been driven out of Afghanistan.
Immediately after, Lloyd Austin, the Secretary of Defense, said that reports of Americans being beaten by the Taliban were ‘unacceptable’.
Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, then said that it was known al-Qaeda retained a presence in Afghanistan.
Video on social media showed chaotic scenes at Kabul airport, for the fifth day since Kabul fell to the Taliban.
Biden added on Friday that 13,000 people had been flown out of Afghanistan on U.S. military aircraft since Saturday, and thousands more had been evacuated on private charter flights.