Many told me they struggle with decision to end Afghan war. Don’t want war forever, but feel uncertain. That is normal. Ending war does not end pain from 9/11. I took this GroundZero photo. Had with me working in Kabul and now in my Congressional office. Never forget.(THREAD)
Ending a war should never be easy, especially when it carries out collective trauma. Despite working in Afghanistan in 2011, visiting in 2019, and being on Armed Services/Foreign Affairs Committees, I still struggle too on what to do next. Here are some ways to think through.2/20
ORIGINAL MISSION: When Congress authorized the war, the sole objective identified in authorization (2001 AUMF) states: “in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.” Stop future attacks. 3/20
THE EFFECT: Al Qaeda in Afghanistan is currently decimated. Estimates are only a few hundred left with no safe haven. Bin Laden killed a decade ago. AQ status has been at this low ineffectual level for years. So why then is there this big debate about ending the war? 4/20
The war effort and mission expanded over years like this: To prevent rise of Al Qaeda, we needed to stop rise of Taliban. To stop rise of Taliban, we need to shore up Afghan military. To do that, we need to shore up Afghan gov. To do that, we need to...(fill in the blank). 5/20
FILL IN THE BLANK: Congress appropriated more than $143B for Afghan reconstruction/support. There was only 50miles of paved road in Afghanistan on 9/11. We built more than 10k miles. hospitals, power grids, etc. We cover more than half of all expenses for entire Afghan gov. 6/20
$88.3B of funds spent to train/equip/sustain Afghan forces. There are over 305,000 Afghan forces. Every year, we pay 75% of their salaries and of total costs of Afghan forces. Afghan gov pays about 10-14%. This will likely continue for years to come. 7/20
WHEN IS ENOUGH? For 20 years, we undertook a conditions-based approach to exiting Afghanistan. The achilles heel of this approach is seen in three harsh realities (1) We can never expect to see an Afghanistan without Taliban. No amount of effort will destroy them entirely. 8/20
(2) Afghan forces will never be able to completely deter threat from potential Taliban assault. (3) No one can or should ever fully trust the word of the Taliban, even if Taliban is part of an intra-Afghan gov agreement. There will always be a risk they will seek power grab. 9/20
If we accept these 3 realities, then the options for US forces fall under two broad categories. (1) We would be prepared to stay in Afghanistan permanently, or (2) We will endure significant risk no matter when we pull troops out. 10/20
Main arguments I’ve heard for staying in Afghanistan permanently (or protracted) is Taliban gains jeopardize gains against terrorists. And costs are lower—we haven’t suffered large US fatalities in recent years. 3k troops not overly burdensome relative to past commitments 11/20
TWO UNKNOWNS: With US forces out, Will the Taliban try to seize control over Afghanistan? If Taliban is successful or if protracted conflict occurs, will that give Al Qaeda or other terrorist group safe haven? No one, not Biden nor any critics, know the answers to these. 12/20
RECONSTITUTION: Some argue Al Qaeda can reconstitute quickly as did ISIS in Syria/Iraq. ISIS’ growth was facilitated by large flows of foreign fighters into Syria funded because of oil fields controlled by ISIS. Conditions are different than what we see in Afghanistan. 13/20
ISIS KHORASAN: Known as ISIS-K, this offshoot of ISIS in Iraq/Syria and competitor to Al Qaeda was the main threat I worried about when I visited Afghanistan in late 2019. Their position in eastern AFG was deeply damaged over the last year, including by the Taliban. 14/20
WOMEN AND CHILDREN: There was a weekend market in Kabul for women owned businesses that I would visit. Would Taliban bring about a return to serious repression against women and children? We are seeing this concern in areas the Taliban controls. 15/20 washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pac…
WHAT I’M LOOKING OUT FOR: As details emerge, I’m paying close attention to whether we can maintain any overflight capabilities(surveillance from unmanned drones) and structure of intel operations. Essentially: how do we maintain eyes on potential terrorist growth? 16/20
MULTIPLE TOOLS: Our ability to shape the future of Afghanistan doesn’t just exist in drones and guns. We still have capable diplomats on the ground and economic tools that can help provide the kind of stability needed for long term success. 17/20
NO GUARANTEES: One time in the Situation Room I remember hearing Obama say “The one thing in this room I never ask for is a guarantee.” That line lingers with me. Our nation has significant power, but we cannot conflate power with control. 18/20
There is sometimes an illusion of control with work at White House. Hubris can make us think we will be greeted as liberators in Iraq or that war would end in months. I believe it’s time to end this war, but we are embarking on a new direction that carries inherent risks. 19/20
END OF CHAPTER: As the last soldier leaves this year, we’ll turn a page on this conflict and era. But what comes next? What will define this new era in the way Afghanistan did? Next week, I’ll give you my thoughts on the new chapter of global politics about to begin. (END)
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5 years ago this week, I walked my family into the Oval Office. I watched my immigrant mom speechless as she shook hands with Pres Obama while he held my 6 m/o baby boy. Three generations of my family in the Oval with the President. I kept thinking “This is America”(THREAD)
That was the last time I was in the White House. The first time I entered that sacred building was when my mother took me as a boy. She taught me two things: 1) This house belongs to the people and 2) this building (and our democracy) is bigger than any of us. 2/14
PEOPLE’S HOUSE: I remember how proud my mom was that as an immigrant she was able to walk us into the White House. We wandered the Rose Garden. I felt connected to my government. I wasn’t intimidated, I was invited. I wasn’t excluded, instead I felt welcomed to participate. 3/14
I cried twice this week. Once when young woman told me “Mom was my sanctuary.” Her mom was among 8 killed in Atlanta. I cried again when I saw video of Filipino mom kicked in face in NYC. Amidst tragedy, let’s pay tribute to AAPI moms who give us strength (THREAD) #StopAsianHate
GRIT: I visited ATL this week to talk with children of victims. They all said their moms were hardworking. Long hours, careful spending to save for family/retirement. One said through tears, “She worked so hard to have it end that way.” Another said “She’s finally resting.” 2/11
ENDURANCE:Their powerful reflections hit me hard. When I was young, my mom worked night shift as hospital nurse so she could take care of sister and me during daytime. I asked her once when she had time to sleep. She said simply, “I don’t know.” Moms have superhuman strength.3/11
I cannot get this shameful video out of my mind today. Attacker yelled “You don’t belong here.” But doorman’s actions said same thing when he shut door on a broken woman lying on sidewalk. We as a nation need to talk about bystanders to hate (THREAD) #WeBelong#StopAsianHate
When that door closes, it sends a clear message. It says I’m not going to help. It says this is none of my business. It says to the woman, you don’t belong in this building; keep your problems outside. It says this is not my responsibility. 2/11
I feel like this is so metaphorical to the challenges we face as a nation right now. We as a society are having a crisis of empathy. What we are losing is that important sense of sharedness. Whether that is shared experiences, shared truths, shared space, shared identity. 3/11
I flew down to Atlanta this morning to pay my respects to those lost in the shootings and show our solidarity against hate. I’m also here to listen and hear from the community what we can do to heal. #StopAsianHate
I’ll be sharing some of those stories on this thread. I hope you’ll follow with me and keep the victims in your thoughts today.
We’re traveling from the site of the first shooting to the second. It’s a long drive, and on this drive something becomes very clear: the killer’s intent to turn his hate targeting AAPI into something even more horrible.
My 5 yr old boy came home and asked me why bigger kid kept calling him Chinese Boy. My son, confused, told the boy I’m a New Jersey Boy. He laughed it off but my eyes welled up. 50 yrs ago my parents immigrated here but we cannot shake shadow of foreignness. #StopAsianHate THREAD
I was sad because my son shared what was likely his first ever experience of discrimination. For me it wasn’t first time I heard bias about him. People told me he has cute slanty Chinese eyes or it’s great we teach him English as primary lang as if our default is foreigner. 2/13
When someone joked about whether he was born knowing Kung Fu, it reminded me of the Jackie Chan taunts I got that started “innocent” but then turned dangerous as I got older and found myself attacked by drunk men seeking to prove their strength by beating up “Jackie Chan” 3/13
I’ll never forget the feeling when I learned that my own government questioned my loyalty. Before Congress I worked in diplomacy at StateDept. I once received a letter banning me from working on Korea issues just because of my last name. I was stunned. (THREAD) #StopAsianHate
I had previously worked in Afghanistan for State. I had a top secret security clearance. But here was a letter saying we don’t trust you. What confused me more is that I didn’t even apply to work on Korea. The StateDept was proactively telling me they didn’t trust me. 2/13
And it wasn’t just me. I learned that other Asian Americans at State had same thing happen. It was called “assignment restrictions” - a bureaucratic way of saying “failing loyalty test.” politico.com/amp/news/2021/… 3/13