Obama missed Afghanistan ‘transition’ opportunity, retired Army general says

With U.S. military involvement in conflicts lasting two decades, four presidents share at least some portion of the blame for last week’s deadly Kabul disaster, a retired Army general says.

But one of those presidents – barack-obama” target=”_blank”>Barack Obama<, the Washington, D.C., area and a field in western us-regions.

FORMER OBAMA OFFICIALS HAMMERING BIDEN ON AFGHANISTAN HIGHLIGHTED IN SCORCHING RNC AD

Then-President Obama announces the death of Usama bin Laden from the East Room of the White House in Washington in 2011. (Associated Press)

Then-President Obama announces the death of Usama bin Laden from the East Room of the White House in Washington in 2011. (Associated Press)

It was former President George W. Bush who initiated the Afghanistan operation, in response to the terror” target=”_blank”>terror<

“(But) at some point, maybe when Usama (bin Laden) was killed, it was probably time to transition” out of Afghanistan, Pittard told Border Report.

“At some point, maybe when Usama (bin Laden) was killed, it was probably time to transition.”

— Retired Maj. Gen. Dana Pittard

Retired Army Maj. Gen. Dana Pittard. (Fox News)

Retired Army Maj. Gen. Dana Pittard. (Fox News)

U.S. forces finally tracked down and killed bin Laden, the Saudi-born mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, on May 2, 2011, in Abbottabad, Pakistan, during the Obama administration.

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President Biden at the time was Obama’s vice president, and frequently reminded voters about the successful bin Laden mission when the Obama-Biden team sought, and won, reelection in 2012.

“Bin Laden is dead, GM is alive,” became a familiar Biden refrain at campaign stops, as the Democrats touted both the avenging of the 9/11 deaths and a rebound in the U.S. economy that year.

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But instead of making plans to gradually end the Afghanistan operation, the U.S. remained involved there – through a second Obama term and then through the term of former President Donald Trump, before Biden finally chose to bring U.S. troops home – a decision that emboldened the Taliban and led to last Thursday’s terror attack in Kabul, for which an affiliate of ISIS claimed responsibility.

On Friday, Obama posted a series of Twitter messages in reaction to Thursday’s Kabul attacks.

“Our hearts go out to the families who lost a loved one, and to everyone continuing the mission in Kabul,” Obama wrote in one message. “We’re also thinking of the families of the Afghans who died, many of whom stood by America and were willing to risk everything for a chance at a better life.”

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