Pentagon officials are watching the Taliban’s sweeping advances in Afghanistan “with deep concern” and are encouraging its Afghan partners to “step up” and defend their country amid the pullout of US forces, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said on Sunday.
Kirby told Fox News that the Pentagon was “not unmindful” of the situation. “We’re certainly watching with deep concern the deteriorating security situation and the violence, which is of course way too high, and the advances and the momentum that the Taliban seems to have right now,” he said.
Kirby said officials are monitoring the Taliban’s movements in the country and working with the Afghan military “to encourage them to use the capacity and the capability that we know they have, and we know that they know how to defend their country.” He said Afghanistan’s capacity and capabilities included a “very capable” Air Force and “very sophisticated” special forces that can help defend the country from the Taliban resurgence. “This is a time for them to step up and to do exactly that,” Kirby said of their Afghan partners.
With U.S. Central Command estimating that more than 90% of the withdrawal process is complete, Kirby said that even though U.S. troops won’t be supporting Afghanistan on the ground, the U.S. will continue to support the country and its people. “We are not walking away from this relationship,” Kirby said. “We’re going to continue to support them from a financial perspective, logistical perspective and certainly aircraft maintenance.”
Meanwhile, General Sir Nick Carter, the chief of the UK defense staff has said it is “too early to suggest” that Afghanistan is “going to go to tell in a handcart”. He claimed that there were “reports from some of the rural areas that the Taliban have taken over that they’re actually allowing girls to go to school” and said it was “too early to say what will happen”.
“You know, it’s got a burgeoning civil society, it’s got a media that is remarkable in many ways. And of course, they’ve got an education system now. And actually, the Taliban recognize that. So again, I think we’re very quick to suggest this is going to go to hell in a handcart. It’s too early to suggest that.”
However, Republican Adam Kinzinger, an Air Force veteran who flew missions in Afghanistan and Iraq, told NBC that he agreed with media characterizations that the U.S. and allied pullout from the country after a 20-year deployment as a “crushing defeat” at the hands of the Taliban insurgency.