Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) is pressing Democrat President Joe Biden directly for answers on the anniversary of the terrorist bombing at Hamid Karzai International Airport that left 13 American servicemen and women dead and their families’ lives forever changed.
Boebert on Friday morning sent a three-page letter direct to Biden demanding specific answers from the president about what happened, why it happened, who was responsible, and why nobody has been held accountable for these deaths yet. The letter, obtained by Breitbart News exclusively ahead of its public release, is one of the fiercest indictments of Biden for his deadly mismanagement of the end of the U.S. war in Afghanistan to date—and is likely to be met with serious resistance from the left and Democrat Party.
In a statement about the letter, Boebert ripped Biden for not having time to care about the 13 Americans whose lives were taken in that terrorist bombing—a reference to how Biden repeatedly checked his watch at the dignified transfer of their remains to family members back here stateside in the aftermath of the attack.
“One year after 13 of America’s best and brightest were killed in Afghanistan, so many questions still remain. Congress deserves answers, the American people deserve answers, and the 13 Gold Star Families certainly deserve answers about what happened,” Boebert told Breitbart News. “Joe Biden has never had time for these 13 heroes. From checking his watch at Dover to passing over their sacrifice at the State of the Union, this so-called ‘Commander in Chief,’ who is in command of nothing, has disrespected those who gave their all in support of our great country.”
In the letter to the president, the congresswoman lays the blame specifically at his feet. “You were the one who sought this office,” she writes. “The buck stops with you.”
“The lives of 13 American families will never be the same – will never be made whole – because of your incompetence and the grotesque negligence of your subordinates,” Boebert writes to Biden. “From February 2020 until August 26, 2021, not a single American servicemember had lost their life in Afghanistan – a period of 18 months. Five days before we withdrew from Afghanistan, thirteen courageous marines and sailors offered for the posterity of our nation their full measure of devotion. In their sacrifice, they fulfilled that old Bible verse: ‘there is no greater love than this, that a person would lay down his life for the sake of his friends.’ Americans continue to mourn the lives of these heroes, many of whom were in their early 20s. As a nation, we continue to lament the loss of our country’s prestige and honor, and we regret that you were – and are still – charged with the incredible task of leading our people. For the past year and a half, your regime has done nothing more than recycle excuse-filled diatribes aimed against your predecessor, and quite frankly, the American people don’t deserve your lies or your regime’s brazen attempt to whitewash the harrowing historical record. They deserve clear answers from their Commander-in-Chief.”
Boebert accuses Biden of being both “incoherent and demoralizing” when he argues “out of one corner of your mouth that your predecessor had placed you in an impossible situation in Afghanistan, and out of the other corner of your mouth, insist that the evacuation of our citizens was a resounding success – indeed, all praise to the greatest airlift in American history, an airlift so successful that more than 95% of all evacuees weren’t even American.”
“Never again do I want to hear you argue that our withdrawal from Afghanistan was in any way good or even acceptable,” Boebert writes to Biden.
Letter to POTUS – Afghanistan FINAL Copy by Breitbart News on Scribd
“You abandoned more than 1,000 American citizens and thousands of Lawful Permanent Residents (LPRs); you left them to fend for themselves in a 10th Century Islamist theocracy you helped establish over the course of just a few weeks,” Boebert writes. “Worse still, you left it to your breathtakingly incompetent Secretary of State to offer contradictory messages to our fellow citizens as to whether it was safe to travel to Hamid Karzai International Airport (HKIA), complicating evacuation efforts even further.”
The attack, on Aug. 26, 2021, was the deadliest in years in Afghanistan. Boebert points to a Washington Post report two days later that revealed Gen. Kenneth McKenzie—whom Biden put in charge of the operation to withdraw from Afghanistan—turned down an offer from the Taliban for the U.S. to take responsibility for the security of Kabul during the evacuation.
“He rejected that offer outright and maintained that the mission of evacuating Americans only required the use of HKIA,” Boebert writes. “If the United States was able to take ownership of security in Kabul, the issue of Taliban checkpoints around the perimeter of the airport would have become a moot point, the lives of our 13 servicemembers could have been spared, and the evacuation would have been far more successful at getting our people out of that hellhole.”
One year later, Boebert writes to Biden, his “regime continues to avoid any accountability for mistakes and derelictions of duty.”
“It is simply beyond comprehension that anyone involved in compromising our ability to rescue Americans could still be cashing taxpayer-funded paychecks and/or pensions,” Boebert writes. “Anyone with a role to play in this national debacle should resign in disgrace. If they refuse, you must fire them with extreme prejudice.”
From there Boebert pivots into detailing six very specific questions for the president and his “regime.”
The first question simply zones in on accountability. “How many individuals have been held accountable for the numerous failures in the lead-up and execution of the Afghanistan withdrawal – is the figure more than zero?” Boebert writes. “Who are they? Please specify how these individuals have been held accountable.”
The second question asks Biden if any Americans are still stuck behind in Afghanistan. “How many Americans, if any, are still stranded in Afghanistan?” Boebert asks.
The third question is much more detailed and focuses on whether Biden would have personally made the various decisions the generals he put in charge did:
As discussed above, GEN McKenzie was offered control of the security of Kabul by the Taliban. Were you aware of this offer from the Taliban? If you were, why didn’t you do anything about it? And if you were not aware, why would you be excluded from discussions regarding critical parameters relating to the evacuation of U.S. citizens, especially as you carry ultimate responsibility for their safe return? In hindsight, don’t you agree it was foolish to trust the Taliban to secure to the perimeter around HKIA, particularly since reports indicate Americans attempting to go to HKIA were beaten by the Taliban?3 Would you have turned down the opportunity for the United States to oversee security in Kabul? Will you commit to pursuing basic accountability measures for any individual found to have played a role in worsening the circumstances of our tragically botched withdrawal?
The fourth question asks Biden whether he agrees with a spokesperson for Gen. McKenzie who denied news reports that the United States could have stopped the bombing from happening one year ago.
“In September 2021, news reports emerged that the Pentagon could have stopped the suicide bomber that killed 13 of our Servicemembers on August 26th and had a predator drone locked on this individual, a member of ISIS-K,” Boebert writes. “When permission was requested to launch the drone, it was supposedly denied. Fox News Channel’s Jennifer Griffin spoke to ‘multiple senior leaders,’ with a spokesman for GEN McKenzie (Ret.) categorically denying these claims. Can you also categorically deny these reports, and will you commit to ordering the Inspector General of the Department of Defense to conduct an independent review into this claim to determine its veracity?”
The fifth question is also very much in-depth and zones in on corruption allegations and ties to bad actors in the region that Secretary of State Antony Blinken allegedly has:
As he was preparing for his own nomination as Secretary of State, Antony Blinken revealed that he had once received more than $5,000 in a speaking fee from the former Prime Minister of Pakistan, Imran Khan (who was in office during the time of the Afghanistan withdrawal). Mr. Khan immediately praised the Taliban following the fall of Kabul, telling the world that the Taliban had finally “[broken] the shackles of slavery”.
Were Antony Blinken’s financial ties to a prominent terrorist sympathizer – an individual who led a country known for regularly providing safe refuge for several members of the Taliban – thoroughly scrutinized before Mr. Blinken’s nomination as Secretary of State? Did these ties raise any concerns following the fall of Kabul? Do you believe Mr. Blinken should answer for his financial ties to the leader of a terrorist state, yes or no?
Given that your regime failed to implement an NEO until August 14, don’t you agree that Mr. Blinken’s decision to go vacationing in the Hamptons as Kabul fell to the Taliban – and his decision not to go beyond very basic evacuation planning until hours before Kabul fell – indicate to you that Secretary Blinken ought to be removed from the sacred charge of keeping Americans safe?
The sixth and final question Boebert poses to Biden is about the billions of dollars in Afghan funds the U.S. currently has restricted the Taliban from accessing.
“The United States still holds $7 billion dollars in Afghan central bank reserves; can you commit that none of these funds will be used in any way that would make it easier for the Taliban to retain power?” Boebert asks. “Does your regime have a long-term plan for the use of these funds?”
Boebert concludes the letter to Biden by calling his failures during the Afghan withdrawal a “national embarrassment” and pledging to achieve real accountability and answers in the next Congress.
“As we enter the 118th Congress, there will be increased calls for accountability and additional information, including further investigations into the perceived and real failures of those charged with the task of evacuating our fellow citizens,” Boebert writes. “My colleagues and I will make sure of it. Your lack of leadership during the withdrawal from Afghanistan was a national embarrassment and tragedy of the highest order, particularly for those families who continue to grieve the loss of their young heroes. For as long as you are the President, I will never let you forget that.”
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