Gen. Austin “Scott” Miller was the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan for nearly three years. (Jeff Harris/Defense Department)
Washington Post: Top U.S. commander in Afghanistan to step down Monday, marking a symbolic end to 20 years of war
KABUL — The top U.S. general in Afghanistan will step down on Monday, marking a symbolic end to 20 years of American military involvement here — and coming as an ascendant Taliban threatens to topple the central government.
Army Gen. Austin “Scott” Miller, who has overseen the war effort for nearly three years, will relinquish responsibility in a ceremony at the top U.S. military headquarters. President Biden said last week that the military withdrawal he ordered will be complete Aug. 31, but Miller’s departure is among the only pieces left. Virtually all other troops, contractors and equipment already have exited, defense officials said on the condition of anonymity because of the issue’s sensitivity.
Miller will depart Afghanistan as the war’s longest-serving senior U.S. officer. A former commander of the elite Delta Force, he oversaw a tumultuous period that included the Trump administration’s 2020 deal with the Taliban that set the stage for withdrawal, and the final call by Biden in April to remove all troops.
Read more ....
Update: Top US commander to exit Afghanistan amid Taliban surge (AP)
WNU Editor: He is getting out ASAP. He also has a lot to answer for.
1 comment:
I disagree.
The General assumed his command on September 2, 2018. The war was already lost due to institutional rot in Congress, various federal bureaucracies (and municipalities and states) and the military.
Looking to General Miller for the answers as to why the US lost is simply scapegoating.
Officer school, war college and the DoD does not prepare a person for the utter shit that is the American political scene.
Post a Comment