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SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 | The Jewish Home OCTOBER 29, 2015 | The Jewish Home

Political Crossfire

Kabul Isn’t Saigon ‘75. It’s Beirut ‘83 By Marc A. Thiessen

P

resident Joe Biden’s disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan has been compared with the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam. But in the wake of Thursday’s suicide bombing at the Kabul airport, what we are seeing in Afghanistan is far worse than a repeat of Saigon, 1975; it is now a repeat of Beirut, 1983. On October 23, 1983, terrorists detonated a truck bomb at the U.S. Marine Corps barracks in Beirut, killing 241 American service members who were participating in a peacekeeping operation. Three months later, after failing to retaliate in any meaningful fashion, President Ronald Reagan withdrew all U.S. forces from Beirut. Reagan’s decision to cut and run had disastrous consequences. Osama bin Laden tried to replicate the Beirut Marine Corps barracks bombing with his bombing of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, and then to exceed it with the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Years later, bin Laden cited “the defeat of the American forces in Beirut” as proof that the United States was soft and that if al-Qaeda hit us hard enough, we could be forced to retreat and withdraw. He further declared that the United States had done the same thing in Somalia, “trailing disappointment, defeat and failure behind it.” The United States, he said, “achieved nothing. It left quicker than people had imagined.” The United States would eventually retreat from Afghanistan in similar fashion. Now Biden is fulfilling bin Laden’s

prophecy. Except after Thursday’s attack, we are no longer simply handing the country over to our enemies, as we did in Vietnam; we are now leaving under fire, as we did in Beirut. And just as the Beirut retreat inspired America’s enemies to attack the U.S. homeland on 9/11, if we pull out on August 31 with our tail between our legs, it will send a signal of weakness certain to inspire terrorists around the world. Instead of a speedy evacuation, we need an immediate show of strength.

Second, we should inform the Taliban that because its failure to prevent this attack has delayed the evacuation, we will not be leaving on August 31 – and will not set another arbitrary deadline for withdrawal. We will depart once every American, and every Afghan ally, has been evacuated – and not a moment sooner. We will stay as long as it takes to carry out that mission. We should make clear this is not a request. They have no say in the matter. Third, we should inform the Tal-

Now Biden is fulfilling bin Laden’s prophecy.

First, we should inform the Taliban that the United States holds it responsible for this attack. It established a ring of checkpoints surrounding around the airport. It controlled who got in and who did not. It stopped both Americans and Afghans from reaching the airport – but somehow the bomber got through, and another struck at a nearby hotel. Whether letting the bomber through to the airport was intentional or simply a security failure, we should tell the Taliban it failed to meet its commitment to secure the airport – and is thus responsible for the deaths of more than a dozen U.S. service members.

iban that since it failed to establish a secure perimeter at the airport, we will do so. We are also retaking Bagram air base so that we have another airfield to use for evacuations. And we will be conducting missions across the country to retrieve stranded Americans and their Afghan allies. Any interference in these operations will have severe consequences. Finally, we should immediately deliver justice to those who attacked U.S. forces. In a speech Thursday afternoon, Biden warned the terrorists, “We will hunt you down and make you pay.” That will be hard to do if we withdraw all of our forces from the

country on Tuesday. While Biden promised to strike back, it was his decision to hand Bagram air base over to the Taliban that allowed it to throw open a prison there, releasing 5,000 to 7,000 prisoners – who were free to threaten U.S. forces as they pulled out. The prison contained a maximum-security cell block that held the most senior and dangerous Islamic State and al-Qaeda terrorist leaders. If any of those prisoners were involved in Thursday’s attack, that would be a searing indictment of Biden’s decision to give up Bagram before we withdrew. But instead of being chastened, Biden used this deadly attack as justification to stick with his August 31 deadline, declaring this is “why I’ve been so determined to limit the duration of this mission.” In other words, the terrorists succeeded: By killing Americans, they reinforced Biden’s determination to retreat as fast as he can. If Biden fails to act decisively in response to this attack, and withdraws on Tuesday as scheduled, he will embolden our enemies to carry out even more deadly attacks once we have left Afghanistan. To do so would be to repeat the mistakes the United States made in Beirut four decades ago. The lesson of Beirut is that weakness is provocative – and that when the United States runs after a terrorist attack, the result is not safety and security, it is even more terrorism. (c) 2021, Washington Post Writers Group


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Articles inside

Just Get Rid of It by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

3min
pages 166-168

Your Money

3min
pages 164-165

Greenlighting the Taliban’s Takeover of Kabul is a National Disgrace by Marc A. Thiessen

3min
pages 154-155

Silver Star Recipients by Avi Heiligman

5min
pages 156-159

Kabul Isn’t Saigon ‘75, It’s Beirut ’83 by Marc A. Thiessen

4min
pages 152-153

The Aussie Gourmet: Harissa Roasted Carrots

2min
pages 140-141

Notable Quotes

6min
pages 146-151

Rosh Hashana at Our Table by Renee Muller Rosh Hashana at Our Table by Renee Muller

5min
pages 142-145

Parenting Pearls

6min
pages 138-139

Seeing Things Anew by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

5min
pages 132-135

More to Apples Than Dipping in the Honey by Cindy Weinberger, MS, RD, CDN

3min
pages 136-137

Dating Dialogue, Moderated by Jennifer Mann, LCSW

9min
pages 128-131

Giving Jews a Good Name: Allison Josephs of Jew in the City Talks about Finding Hashem by Tammy Mark

20min
pages 122-127

My Israel Home

3min
pages 118-119

Delving into the Daf

7min
pages 108-111

The Wandering Jew

9min
pages 112-117

New Life on Rosh Hashana by Rabbi Daniel Glatstein

22min
pages 104-107

Coronating the King on His Terms by Rabbi Benny Berlin

4min
pages 100-103

A Tzaddik in Our Midst: R’ Pinchas Mordechai Solow, zt”l by Rabbi Dovid Bender

8min
pages 78-81

Backstage Passes to Divine Service by Rav Moshe Weinberger

9min
pages 92-95

The Jewish Paradox by Rebbetzin Chanie Wolowik

3min
pages 96-97

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

2min
pages 90-91

Remembering Rabbi David Beit- ler, z”l, by Mike Dube

3min
pages 82-85

Listening to the Shofar, Becoming the Shofar by Rav Yaakov Feitman

5min
pages 98-99

Odd-but-True Stories

5min
pages 42-45

Israel News

10min
pages 24-31
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