* Gen Milley on Wednesday said cooperation with the Taliban was 'possible' in the hunt for ISIS-K killer
* 'In war you do what you must do ... not what you necessarily want to do,' he said
* The Pentagon briefing came as the Taliban paraded their hardware in Kandahar
* They have captured millions of dollars in U.S. weaponry and equipment since U.S. forces left on Monday night
The chairman of the joint chiefs of staff on Wednesday said it was 'possible' that the Pentagon would work with the Taliban to hunt down and destroy the ISIS-K terrorist group.
The Afghan affiliate of the Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack last week that killed 13 U.S. service members.
Since then the U.S. has launched two drone strikes against its members.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: The White House is signaling that they want to find some way to work with the Taliban. It is telling that the US National Security adviser does not call the Taliban the enemy when asked .... Biden's national security adviser Jake Sullivan refuses to call the Taliban the enemy and says 'it's hard to put a label on it' (Daily Mail). Needless to say. I think this would be a terrible mistake.
More News On Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley Saying US Coordination With Taliban On Strikes Against ISIS ‘Possible’
Milley: US coordination with Taliban on strikes ‘possible’ -- AP
Milley: ‘It's possible’ U.S. will work with Taliban to thwart ISIS-K -- Politico
Pentagon: 'Possible' US will work with Taliban against ISIS-K -- FOX News
General Mark Milley Says ‘It’s Possible’ U.S. Will Work with Taliban on Future Missions Against ISIS-K -- National Review
'Ruthless group': Pentagon wary of working with the Taliban moving forward -- Washington Examiner
ReplyDeleteIf the Taliban is not the enemy, then why do we have to negotiate to get our citizens?
What a insult to the family of dead coalition troops, what were they then?
ReplyDeleteThe incompetency of this administration is mind boggling , how about you hunted them down while you actually were running the show.
All this administration is under cocaine.
ReplyDeleteYeah, hard for YOU to put a label on it, globalist piece of shit. I guarantee the Taliban's feelings for the US are NOT "hard to put a label on."
ReplyDeletePerfect example why we lost right here. Our military leaders have become navel-gazing politically correct fuktards. Started way back in the 50s with Korea, it's much worse today. "Hard to put a label on it" my ass. It's easy to put a label on it. If he had instead been asked, "Why did we spend 20 years in Afghanistan?" now THAT'S hard to put a label on it.
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