×

Clay and Buck

For a better experience,
download and use our app!

Biden Owns the Worst Foreign Policy Debacle in Decades

16 Aug 2021

BUCK: We’re gonna talk about the surrounding of the airport in Kabul. We’re going to discuss how we got to this point. The Biden administration on vacation right now, Joe Biden, along with some of his other senior staff while people are seen on video at Kabul airport scrambling across the tarmac trying to get aboard U.S. Air Force jets evacuating people.

This is a disaster the Biden administration promised us would not happen. This is the catastrophe we were told, “the smartest guys and gals in the room,” so to speak, will avoid; and yet here we are. We’ll break down every aspect of this. And then later on in the show, we’ll be joined by our friend Sean Parnell, former U.S. Army combat veteran who served in Afghanistan.

Also, our friend Matt Walsh from The Daily Wire will be here in the third hour to talk about some foreign policy and also some covid policy here at home. Plus, the Obama birthday party seems like there was some serious spreading of covid that went on, but it was a sophisticated spreading of covid at the Obama birthday party. We’ll get into all of that and more today with you.

But let’s just start with this. It would be hard to think of a bigger blunder, a bigger foreign policy mess in the first year of a presidency than what you are seeing right now unfold in Afghanistan. There are so many aspects of this. What’s happening right now is that the Taliban is in control. They have photos of themselves — video — in the presidential palace in Kabul, the capital city.

They’ve seized all the major provincial capitals. They have done it in a matter of days. A breathtaking Taliban blitzkrieg the likes of which nobody at the top level of the federal government was predicting. And yet now we’re to be told that somehow this is the Biden administration knowing what’s going on? Now it’s Trump’s fault? They’re scrambling for any defense whatsoever.

Let’s just remember — let’s take a trip down memory lane, Clay — to what in July the Biden administration was saying. Play clip 2.

BIDEN: No! It is not!

VOICE: Why?

BIDEN: Because you have the Afghan troops have 300,000 — well-equipped, as well equipped as any army in the world and an air force — against something like 75,000 Taliban. It is not inevitable.

BUCK: Really well-equipped army, Clay, that apparently did not fight at all against the Taliban.

CLAY: Yeah. And let’s just go ahead and play some of these greatest hits which I think are going to come a long way towards defining the Biden administration. We already thought that it was a level of incompetence that we hadn’t seen in a long time. Friday, we talked about the fact that basically everything Joe Biden has touched has blown up in his face.

But 5-1/2 weeks ago, he was asked whether there might be any parallels between the fall of Saigon in 1975 and Afghanistan, and he said, “No.” I think it’s fair to say Afghanistan and Kabul is Saigon on steroids. But 5-1/2 weeks ago, Joe Biden told you that what you are seeing on your television screen and on your telephones as you watch and follow this on social media, that it was impossible. Play cut 3.

BIDEN: None whatsoever! Zero! What you had is you had entire brigades breaking through the gates of our embassy. Six, if I’m not mistaken. The Taliban is not the South… (sputters) North Vietnamese army. They’re not… They’re remotely comparable in terms of capability. There’s gonna be no circumstance you’re gonna see people being lifted off the roof of — of a embassy of the United States from Afghanistan. It is not at all comparable.

BUCK: Now, that’s exactly what we saw.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: So isn’t that a remarkable circumstance? Prophetic in its opposite, in a sense here. It’s like Joe Biden said, “This will not happen,” Clay, and the things that he promised would not are actually what did happen.

CLAY: And it happened in 5-1/2 weeks, Buck! I can’t remember any American leader — I’m trying to think — making a prediction that is this irrevocably wrong. It’s different knew it upon and we can argue about what the significance of it was and all of those different impacts. But within 5-1/2 weeks for a foreign policy explosion like this? Listen to cut 4. This was last month in July — 5-1/2 weeks ago — Joe Biden said it’s “highly unlikely” Afghanistan will fall to the Taliban.

It happens before we can even leave the country!

BIDEN: So the question now is, “Where do they go from here?” That the jury is still out. But likelihood is going to be the Taliban overrunning everything and owning the whole country is highly unlikely.

BUCK: That’s exactly what happened. It happened at lightning speed. Clay, this is the biggest policy, intelligence, and, honestly, military-industrial complex failure in certainly decades, maybe in living memory, or maybe you’d have to go back to Vietnam all the way.

CLAY: You and I, arguably… I said two generations. I’m 42; you’re 39. There, I believe, is a strong argument that there has been no American foreign policy failure the likes of this that’s occurred in our lifetimes, and in the lifetimes of a lot of our listeners and for those of you who are able to remember Saigon in 1975 to signify the end of the Vietnam War.

This is a monumental, categorical failure for the Joe Biden administration. And we still don’t know, Buck, how it’s going to end, because there’s mass chaos all over Afghanistan right now. You have American military planes that can’t take off because civilians who are trying to flee the Taliban have taken over the airport there in Kabul.

We’ve got all sorts of American citizens who may or may not be able to get out safely. We’re now relying on the Taliban to not exert any form of violence on the remaining Americans there. We’ve had to bring in over 6,000 troops I think at this point. Buck, this is what’s so wild about this, too, Buck. Friday, as our tease was, we said, “Hey, we’re gonna come in on Monday…”

And based on all the data and all the evidence, Kabul was gonna have fallen to Taliban. How in the world is Joe Biden still on vacation? How did Jen Psaki, the spokesperson, leave, if you and I on Friday, Buck, could say, “Hey, this is going to be a disaster; we’ll be talking about it on Monday”? You and I wouldn’t miss this radio show. And the president of the United States still hasn’t talked, the head spokesperson? This is an unbelievable dereliction of duty that I think every American, regardless of political party, should be disgusted by.

BUCK: It turns out that electing a visibly declining sub-mediocrity as president and surrounding him with pronoun-in-their-bio advisers making momentous decisions about U.S. national security is a really bad idea. No matter what you think of Trump — and we’re gonna see them try. They’ve already done this a little bit. “Oh, Trump set the timeline.

“Oh, Trump is the one that put this together; the Biden White House, the hands were tied.” It’s pathetic. But what else are they going to say? “We’re a bunch of idiots”? “We have no idea what we’re doing”? Clay, it defies belief how much this White House has messed this up. It defies belief that they couldn’t have seen this coming at all! Here’s what was expected…

CLAY: We saw it coming, Buck! (laughs)

BUCK: Well, a few days ago, but a month ago —

CLAY: Now, a month ago, you said this on this show! If we went back to archives you said the people that you’re talking to are saying… I well remember it; I know a lot of our listeners do. Based on the people you were talking to, that it was going to happen even faster.

BUCK: Oh, yes. Right. Sorry. Yes. I knew the Taliban would run the country and it would happen faster than Biden. I didn’t know it was gonna happen in five weeks, though. That’s the part of this that’s completely shocking.

CLAY: That’s still wild. But if we are able to foresee that and discussing it on this radio program with nowhere near the ability that the White House has to get all the data, to have all the information, this is a unmitigated disaster the likes of which many of our listeners have never seen in our lives.

BUCK: So what was believed would happen here, just so everyone knows. We’ve gotta remember, they’re lying to you right now, the Biden White House is lying when they say this isn’t any way what they thought was going to happen, that they prepared for, that’s why they’re sending about 6,000 troops —

CLAY: 6,000 troops.

BUCK: — back in to try to make sure, ’cause if the Taliban surrounds as they already have and then decides to open fire on the airport or start bringing down planes, we’re gonna have a disaster that goes even beyond anything we’ve seen.

CLAY: That’s correct.

BUCK: You’d have to go deep into the Vietnam War for something like that. So we have a circumstance here where the Biden White House has no narrative that is credible that does not make them look like abject fools. They at least thought… The consensus, Clay, was we spent all this time…

Biden even mentioned the 300,000 troops. We spent all this time training these different contractors who were out there working with the police and the military. I remember being out there watching these guys getting training while I was with the agency years ago and the belief was that at least there’d be a stalemate for a while, right?

CLAY: To allow a retreat with honor, for lack of a better phrase.

BUCK: This was the Taliban getting waved into city centers and town squares —

CLAY: With almost no resistance and almost no casualties.

BUCK: — by the people that we trained and worked with.

CLAY: That we spent tens of billions of dollars, a trillion dollars total. That’s how we allowed this to happen.

BUCK: How could we not have known? You say, “Oh, well, everyone in Afghanistan knew the Taliban was eventually going to take over.” Although Biden said a month ago, it’s not inevitable. It absolutely was inevitable the Taliban was gonna take back most, if not all of the country. The question was the speed. But I don’t have access anymore to the PDB.

CLAY: Yeah. That’s right. (laughing)

BUCK: I don’t have hundreds of billions of dollars of military and intelligence apparatus at my disposal.

CLAY: Yeah, we were better analyzing this than the entire Biden White House.

BUCK: Two dudes sitting here — one with a Mountain Dew and one with a Diet Creamsicle Shasta or whatever —

CLAY: (laughing) In T-shirts.

BUCK: — in T-shirts were sitting here better at analyzing the fall of Kabul than the Biden administration. I think this is where you’re starting to see there’s panic in this White House, Clay, not so much just because of what’s going on in Kabul but because this goes to a broader narrative of this is worse than Jimmy Carter. In fact, Biden is starting to make Jimmy Carter look like some kind of a strategic genius by comparison, and that’s something that really terrifies the left, because they want power here. That’s what matters first and foremost.

CLAY: Is it wild that as Biden has stayed completely silent in terms of speaking in front of the public — and he is reportedly going to fly from Camp David to the White House to speak at 3:45 eastern. We’ll certainly be talking about what he says tomorrow. That will happen after today’s show. How is it possible that he’s remained silent for this long? Is it crazy, Buck, that I was thinking, “Is he okay?” That was one of my first thoughts when he’s not in front of a camera.

BUCK: I think he’s shocked. I think there’s a shock right now that’s going all the way up. We’ll play more of this for you. If you hear how Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, responded to a question about the air lifting off the embassy, they don’t even have good BS talking points to deploy right now. They’re completely just —

CLAY: Shell-shocked.

BUCK: — shell-shocked in a sense, although they’re actually not the ones out there on the front line. So why don’t we come back to that what the narratives are and then we’ll update you in real time because this is happening in real time. And remember now, this is a period where video and footage and everything is making its way out of Afghanistan —

CLAY: In real time.

BUCK: — in real time so people can see exactly what’s happening here. So we’ll come back with this crisis in Afghanistan and just remember this, folks, it did not have been this way, the withdrawal, whether you think we should have pulled troops out or not, this Biden White House is inept beyond words, an absolute catastrophe.

Recent Stories

Get Password Hint

Enter your email to receive your password hint.

Need help? Contact customer service.

Forgot password

Enter your e-mail to receive your account information via e-mail.

Need help? Contact customer service.

Captain Sean Parnell: Blame the Suits, Not the Boots

16 Aug 2021

BUCK: We have updates for you in real time here about the fall of Kabul to the Taliban — the fall of all of Afghanistan to the Talibs — and we’ve got our friend Sean Parnell joining us now. Sean is a former U.S. Army Airborne Ranger and New York Times best-selling author. He served in the 10th Mountain Division for six years, retired as a captain; received two Bronze Stars, one for valor and the Purple Heart. He’s a good friend of mine. Sean, thanks for being with us.

SEAN: Hey, how’s it going, Buck, Clay? Thanks for having me.

BUCK: So, Sean, tell us, man. What are your top-line thoughts?

SEAN: Buck, I’m crushed. I’m devastated. Twenty years in Afghanistan, so much blood spilled on that soil. Actually, as you know, I served there, I was wounded there, I watched my men do amazing things there. You know, we gave the Afghans a real shot at freedom only to have it squandered with a disastrous exit strategy from Joe Biden.

What strikes me the most — I think what concerns me the most — is that he seems wholly unengaged. Just put it simply, right? Here’s the situation in Afghanistan right now. Afghanistan has fallen. There are still thousands of Americans trapped behind enemy lines in Kabul, and the president of the United States, as of this moment, is still missing in action!

He’s addressing the nation at 3:45. But it’s taken him six days to even communicate anything about this crisis to the American people. My God! What a slap in the face to everybody that’s served in Afghanistan, every family member that knows someone who served in Afghanistan — or, God forbid, family members who’s lost someone there. It’s just an absolute tragedy, one strategic blunder after the next, Buck, and it’s just… It’s hard to wrap my mind around or just put words to how terrible the situation is.

CLAY: Sean, thanks for coming on? What happens now? We have now the idea of a country completely run by the Taliban. We’re out. Is this a danger zone now for Al-Qaeda or a successor terrorist organization to once again rise and begin to plot against American and Western interests?

SEAN: Well, the answer to that question is yes. But I will say that we’re not out yet, and one of the things that we need to focus on — what we need to be singularly focused on — is how do we get American citizens out of Afghanistan safely along with our allies? I’ll tell you this: Ceding Bagram air base is one of the greatest strategic blunders in the last century here for America.

That is one of the few air bases in Afghanistan where you can secure and evacuate people, one of the few landing strips where you can actually land a commercial airliner. There are only a couple of others. The Taliban control all of them! So let’s get our people out there, let’s figure out a way to vet refugees and bring ’em back here safely, and engage our allies so that they can maybe take up this cause and help us.

But it’s almost too late for anything else in Afghanistan. It’s just absolutely disgusts me that in Joe Biden’s first statement he found a way to blame President Trump. As someone who’s commanded soldiers and led soldiers in combat, commanders are responsible for everything that happens or fails to happen under their command.

Joe Biden is the commander-in-chief. Joe Biden owns this tragedy in Afghanistan, and he’s getting hit from both sides of the aisle on it as well. So it’s just heartbreaking to me to see what’s happening to American citizens in Afghanistan and our allies who fought so hard to keep that country safe.

BUCK: We’re speaking to Sean Parnell. He’s a former Army Airborne Ranger and New York Times best-selling author of Outlaw Platoon. Sean, it’s interesting because so many veterans that I speak to feel like the decision to leave — ’cause, remember, Trump did put us on a pathway to leaving. There was the negotiation with the Taliban.

And now the decision has been made and the execution of that by Joe Biden. But I’ve spoken to many veterans who say they wanted us to leave but they didn’t want it to be done in this way. And I wanted to pose that to you because I think that some people say, “Well, we can’t criticize what’s going on right now with the people running onto the tarmac at Kabul airport, and not be in favor of the continued presence, the so-called forever war.” How do you separate those two issues of ending the war but ending it the right way?

SEAN: Oh, I’m so glad that you brought that up because it’s such an important point. We spent 20 years in Afghanistan. I just turned 40 in July. I spent over my adult life in that country. It was definitely time to come home. And, as you mentioned, you talk to nine out of 10 veterans and they will tell you it was time to come home, but just not like this.

And there are so many differences, vast differences between the Biden plan and the Trump withdrawal plan. Trump was engaged with regional leaders. Joe Biden hasn’t even talked to Pakistan after seven months of being in office. Joe Biden moved the withdrawal date from May back to September 11th for strictly political reasons. That’s important, because it gave the Taliban the time and the space to consolidate and organize a counteroffensive.

I think the most important part of all is that President Trump’s plan was a conditions-based withdrawal, right? Where he was talking with leaders of the Afghan National Army and the Afghan command. Certain battlefield conditions needed to be met before moving on to the next stage. Joe Biden just cut sling load and ran in that country and then went on vacation and then failed to address the nation for six days. It’s just… It’s a borderline unforgivable tragedy that’s in Afghanistan all laid right at Joe Biden’s feet.

CLAY: Sean, as bad as this foreign policy disaster is — and I think there’s a strong argument it’s the worst foreign policy disaster in America in two generations — how does this impact Joe Biden’s domestic legacy and domestic goals, whether it’s his budget, whether it’s trying to respond to covid? When your “experts” are this wrong about what happened in Afghanistan, isn’t his overall legitimacy as a leader undermined in a massive way across everything he’s attempting, foreign and domestic?

SEAN: Absolutely, 100%. I think a lot of that is going to depend on how he handles this speech at 3:45, right? If he blames President Trump — even spends one millisecond of that speech blaming President Trump — then I believe that he will, as commander-in-chief, have lost the moral authority to lead in this country.

In times of crisis, I don’t care if you’re a Democrat or Republican, leaders lead. They don’t pass the buck, and they do everything that they can to bring this country together so that we can galvanize under one mission and get the mission done. And Joe Biden (sigh), if he blames President Trump at all, it’s gonna be very, very hard for him to lead this country thereafter.

CLAY: When you look for… You’ve talked about how much time you spent on the ground in Afghanistan, Sean. We’re taking calls from vets and we’re gonna continue to take calls throughout this program to allow them to have their voices heard given the sacrifices that they made overseas. You’ve said — and we’ll play a clip from you when we come back — “Blame the suits, not the boots for the Afghanistan failure.” How is this going to be remembered historically? For people out there who may not have followed this over the last 20 years categorize this for us from a military history perspective? What lessons have we learned, and what is the lasting legacy?

SEAN: Well, I’ll say this. This is such… A lesson that we can learn from Afghanistan is that when leaders in this country, whether they’re Democrats or Republicans, when they send our men and women into harm’s way, we have an absolute moral obligation in this country to win. Because if we don’t, then you’re gonna have an entire generation of Americans wondering what the heck they served for in the first place.

And in order to win, you have to have a clear-cut mission, you have to define what victory looks like, and you have to have end-state operations planned out. Truthful, I think we need to get back to declaring war in this country — we haven’t declared war since World War II — involve Congress more, get everything down on paper because when war is not declared and we’re not involving members of Congress, wars tend to go on forever, the mission constantly evolves, and that’s how we end up in a situation like we’re in Afghanistan right now where we’ve been there for 20 years and we’re wondering what the heck we have to show for it.

BUCK: Hey, Sean, it’s Buck. Before we let you go, I wanted you to take the chance here — because you’re speaking to people, as you know, across the country in all 50 states and a lot of them are your brothers and sisters who wore the uniform and fought and bled for this country, many of them lost friends and loved ones in the fight overseas, whether in Iraq or Afghanistan or in any of our GWOT hot spots. What do you want to say to those people, particularly who served in Afghanistan on this occasion, those who carried arms in the name of their nation over there. What do you want to say to them?

SEAN: Yeah, I want to tell you all that you served Afghanistan, “You gave the people of that country a shot to be free. You build schools for children. You helped little girls learn how to read. You built wells in villages and brought humanitarian assistance to people. You defeated the enemies of America at every turn. You were part of the greatest benevolent superpower the world has ever known.

“At your core, you’re a protector. Your service was worth it. You changed lives on the battlefield in Afghanistan. You made this country safer. You removed some of the worst of the worst terrorists the world has ever known. You accomplished every military mission set before you. The suits need to be blamed for this, not the boots. But we’re proud of your service. America’s proud of you. You should be proud too.”

BUCK: Sean Parnell, retired United States Army. And Sean, my friend, we appreciate you joining us here again, and we’ll have you back soon to talk about this as it evolves.

SEAN: All right. Thanks, Buck and Clay. Appreciate it.

CLAY: Thank you.

Recent Stories

Veterans Flood the Phone Lines to Vent on Afghanistan

16 Aug 2021

CLAY: Let’s start with David in Superior, Wisconsin. David, what is your reaction watching all this unspool in front of us?

CALLER: What a slap in the face to every Gold Star family that lost a loved one over there. Guys, you asked earlier, “How is it that they didn’t know?” The answer is, “They did. They knew exactly what would happen and how long it would take.” (garbled cell) Why the chaos? Why all this? Let’s not make any mistake.

Going forward, for all these Marxists in government — in this government here — China is the model. So that’s all you have to do. There’s been news blurb after news blurb that for the past three or four weeks about China’s designs on Afghanistan. You combine that with the fact, how many…? (cell drops)

CLAY: I think we lost David. Yeah.

BUCK: Let’s get Mike in Georgia. Mike also served in Afghanistan. Mike, what branch?

CALLER: Hey, guys. How you doing? So I just actually retired last month from the Army. I spent 22 years as an infantryman, a lot of my adult life in Afghanistan.

BUCK: Well, God bless you. Thank you for your service, Mike.

CALLER: I appreciate it, guys. In looking at… I think you guys have nailed it on the head with everything you’ve been saying. If the administration and all their top advisers and insert-really-cool-job-description here and there, if they didn’t see it coming, they’re either ignorant or they’re lying to the American faces.

I say that because if you took any random private, infantryman, whoever from 82nd, 101st, insert major division here, who’s been on the ground in Afghanistan and asked them, “Could the Taliban take the country in a weekend if we threw our hands up and said, ‘We’re done’?” Every one of them would say, “Absolutely.” As soon as we’re done fighting, the guys who have seen it know how fast the Taliban masses power, how quickly they move, and how effective they can be. So if an 18-year-old private could call it and say (garbled cell).

CLAY: I think we lost him a little bit too. Thanks for the service, Mike in Georgia. Again, we are taking calls. Primarily we’d like to hear from people who actually served in Afghanistan. Buck, we were talking with you. You were over in Afghanistan, uniquely, for a lot of people who sit around and talk about Afghanistan today. As the weekend took place for you, what was your primary emotion?

BUCK: The biggest thing for me was that having seen it at the 30,000-foot policy level as a CIA guy who was interacting a lot with the top people in country, the top military command staff, I just think of all the times that I saw people saying, “The same thing keeps happening here.” The new leadership comes in and says, “We’ve figured it out,” Clay.

“Now we know. We’ve got the recipe for success. A sustainable and defensible Afghanistan with liberal democracy is in our sights. We’re getting there. We’re getting there. We figured it out,” and then there’d be deterioration; the moment somebody would actually look under the rock, so to speak, they’d see problems. That cycle played out every year for a decade.

That’s what I was thinking over the weekend, that the brass, the top military command folks, top intel folks — oh, yeah, lots of that, too — said what the people in D.C. wanted to hear. And what the defense contractors wanted to hear, and they didn’t tell people, was, “This is not sustainable unless we stay forever,” ’cause, remember, they kept saying, “Six more months. Six more months.” It wasn’t 60 more years. And, in essence, some of the people that were saying that, at least they were being honest, right?

CLAY: Right.

BUCK: “Stay forever.” Stay forever was an option but the American people didn’t want that option. That’s what ended up happening.

CLAY: I don’t think the decision about whether or not to leave Afghanistan is secondary to me to finding a way to leave without destroying America’s at least idea of competence around the world, right? There were ways that a well-managed departure from Afghanistan could have occurred.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

BUCK: Jordan in Houston, Texas. Jordan, welcome.

CALLER: Hi. Hi, Clay and Buck. I have to apologize if I get a little emotional talking today. I didn’t realize I was gonna feel so much emotion. But 14 years ago, I was severely wounded by a suicide bomber in Afghanistan, and I watched my best friend, Sergeant First Class Jason Fetty jump on him, and he survived the suicide bombing and he saved my life and the lives of countless others.

I ended up naming my son Jason after him, and I’m just feeling angry and sad. (choking up) I did two tours Iraq and one Afghanistan, and I just… I’m let down by our government. I’m let down by our military leaders. Everyone wants to blame the president. I think there’s definitely blame to go there, but just last month our leaders were telling us that everything was gonna be okay and the Army could stand up. And they collapsed. And it’s just… It’s sad and it’s frustrating.

BUCK: Jordan, let us just say here, first of all, thank you for being a hero and being a warrior for this country. God bless you for calling in and sharing your with everybody across the country. You got a lot of brothers and sisters in uniform right now who are listening to you whose hearts are going out to you. I can assure you of that. What do you think should have happened here, Jordan? If things had gone the way that you wanted, what do you feel like the Biden administration should have done? What does an honorable exit look like, in your mind?

CALLER: Well, that’s just loaded question. I think there’s so much responsibility on the other administrations, too, but I definitely think we should have done a better job of securing it. I think we shouldn’t have given them BAS, Bagram airfield. I think we should have kept that secure. And I definitely think we should have kept a small contingent to try to get everyone out.

But in reality, I think — a couple of folks have alluded to this — we accomplished everything we needed to in the first few years, and then we’re still there for 20 years slugging it out. It’s just really, really sad. I’m just feeling so much emotion. I had talked to… I got a message from my interpreter last night. He made it out a few years ago with his wife and kids but now his family is in danger of being found by the Taliban, and it’s just a crushing blow.

CLAY: Thank you for the service, Jordan, and I think you spoke — and speak — for a lot of different veterans out there. We’re trying to let you guys weigh in. Leslie in San Antonio, also a vet. We only want veterans of Afghanistan to call in today to react to what’s going on. 1-800-282-2882. Your thoughts, Leslie?

CALLER: Hi, Buck. Hi, Clay. Thank you for taking over for Rush. I really appreciate your being there, and I also wanted to thank Jordan for being a very brave hero. I am not a hero. I was just a somebody. I was a Navy vet, but I had the pleasure of serving in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

But my perspective is a little bit more unique. I was a child in Iran. Part of my family and I got to see the Middle East before it descended into terrorism. So what I wanted to say today, basically, is that I saw the Middle East at peace. It wasn’t perfect, but my entire family was in Iran because it was safe for families for people from all over the world.

When Carter, a Democrat, abandoned Iran and the Shah, it removed the linchpin to peace in the entire Middle East. And now Biden has also abandoned Afghanistan, and it’s descended into a furious flame that I’m afraid will blow back onto us and the rest of the world. In Afghanistan —

CLAY: I think there’s a lot of truth to that, Leslie.

CALLER: And let me share a particular experience I had at Camp Leatherneck. We opened a cultural center for the Afghan people. We had a wonderful party that included our Marine leadership as well as the Afghan leadership and civilians. I spoke to many of our fellow Afghans, the interpreters that we’re talking about today — both men and women, by the way — and many have been alive during the time of the Shah in Afghanistan.

They were boys and girls who went to school. They were men and women who were able to go to college and become doctors and professionals. Part of this opening ceremony to the cultural center included a huge wall of photos of Afghanistan in the sixties, pre-Taliban. There was a mutual respect between our military leadership and the Afghan leadership.

Yeah, when I was in Leatherneck we had green-on-green aggression, and it was far from perfect. But we were actually making headway, I felt. And so, yes, it was a long-term commitment. And, unfortunately, I think today we’re gonna be feeling the aftereffects of the abandonment that Biden has put Afghanistan and the rest of the world into.

BUCK: Leslie, thank you for your service and for your unique perspective on all this. We appreciate you calling in. Let’s get Grant in Maine. Grant, welcome to the Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show.

CALLER: Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my call. So obviously this is horrible. It’s a horrible, epic failure and embarrassment on this administration. But I’ve kind of been looking at something different. I’ve been looking at the fact that the media now all the sudden is warning everybody about the possibility of terror attacks on American soil. “Watch out for the terror attacks!”

And to me it seems like we’re being set up. It seems like they wanted this to go this way. They wanted the failure because they want to keep the War on Terror going. Because if it went smoothly, there’d be no more War on Terror. And then what would they have to do? But now it seems like they’re just pumping it back up. So are we facing another 20 years of War on Terror and taking it from a different angle? That’s my concern. Thanks.

BUCK: Grant, I appreciate it. I will never forget unfortunately in terms of authoritarianism they’re getting plenty of mileage out of the war on covid right now as in the lockdowns and the mandates for vaccines and all the rest of it. But you could be right that there will be a crackdown on civil liberties at some point in the future or a crackdown on liberties in general if, in fact, Afghanistan does turn back into a terror platform and all the sudden we’re back in that GWOT posture. But that’s getting a few steps ahead, I think, of where we are today. But thank you for calling in. Clay, what do you think?

CLAY: Let’s get couple more calls here. It is emotional, I know, for so many veterans of Afghanistan to be watching 20 years of American effort as it is falling apart in this way. Aaron in Syracuse, New York. Three tours in Afghanistan for you, Aaron. What are your reactions as you see all of this unspooling?

CALLER: Hey, gentlemen. It’s great to talk to you. One of the things that I experienced when I was over there was, we actually… I’m a veteran of the Marine Corps. We actually ran the Afghan national security force training academy and like an advisement academy. And there was a little bit of mismanagement as far as how we had tried to essentially inflict a Western ideology into more or less a tribal mentality.

Some of the things we could have done better. We had the Afghan national police, the Afghan national border patrol, which were weak to begin with and very heavily propped up by NATO. But because they came from a tribal system, they would look at the colors of their uniforms and they would start to feud. And we never really dealt with that.

The internal feuding of the organizations as we developed our training structure going on, ’cause we’d been running, essentially — like the previous caller on Camp Leatherneck, we’d been running — that academy for the better part of a decade. And a lot of the smaller and simpler things that we could have done to improve the Afghan forces so that we wouldn’t be in this position right now, I think we really failed to do.

I think a lot of that was because it was so heavy-handed by NATO as a whole. They didn’t give the Marine leadership and the Army leadership and the Navy leadership the ability to actually sit down and correct inefficiencies that they saw. In reality what they did was it was mandated based off of NATO. And I think that’s part of what’s led us here today where we are now have security forces that essentially can’t stand on their own two feet.

CLAY: Thank you for your call, Aaron.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

CLAY: Michael in Abilene, Texas. Michael, what you got for us?

CALLER: Hey, how you guys doing?

CLAY: Excellent.

CALLER: Yeah. I just want all the other veterans out there to know, we didn’t abandon Afghanistan. We were just following our orders. We did what we could do, and all we can do right now is just pray for that country to hopefully get a taste of freedom again and basically just continue to live ours. This is probably the hardest thing yet. Every time we try to accomplish something, it’s just a stab in the back. You know… (sigh) I just… My heart’s for our brothers and sisters and for the country of Afghanistan.

CLAY: Thank you for your service, Michael. Bill in San Antonio is also a veteran. He’s been waiting for awhile. Bill, what you got for us?

CALLER: (garbled cell) I have a couple statements here make real quick and get your thoughts on it. I don’t think that holding public office makes someone immune from hating our country, reference mainly to The Squad, Rashida Tlaib, Alexandria Cortez, and Ilhan Omar. Now that the Taliban has taken over, they have in their possession our (garbled) drones that we left behind.

There are some howitzers which may be left with some AI-guided rounds, and on July 28, the co-founder for the Taliban met with the Chinese foreign minister. So if they are establishing ties with China, could this not be some sort of a back-door arms trade with China to give them more technology than we have (garbled).

BUCK: China… Bill, thank you, by the way. China is going to view Afghanistan the way it does every other country and interacts with which is just from a purely, “What benefits us? We don’t care about anything else, human rights or, you know, the international community perspective.” So they’re gonna want resources in Afghanistan.

They’re gonna view this as an opportunity to push their influence in the region. But there’s a lot of players — it’s not just China — that are gonna have a very strong hand in dealing with the Taliban going forward. Pakistan is certainly top of the list. The Iranians tend to, because the Iranians are Shi’a, of course, they do not like the Sunni Muslim Afghani Taliban or the Pakistani Taliban.

But there’s gonna be a whole bunch of countries jockeying for influence, but certainly China is gonna be a major player in that process as well. Thank you, Bill, for calling in. And we also have Charlie in Kansas City, Missouri. Hey, Charlie.

CALLER: Hey, how you guys doing today?

BUCK: We’re good. Thank you. What’s on your mind?

CALLER: Hey, I’m a big military family. I’m retired military 32 years. We have a family of six, five are servings. Our brother-in-law, retired SF. I’m retired from the infantry line of work. But I tell you, I’ve done multiple trips overseas. My son just got deployed with 82nd due to this mess that’s going on right now and he’s an infantry officer.

Bottom line, we need to, A, totally get out of there. Let these kids take care of themselves or if we go back in… The problem I have seen in the different places I’ve been, we have not had enough resources, and we have not had enough men to do the job that’s out there in a timely fashion. Our current president is a complete moron for, A, pulling everybody out of there.

If we go back in, let’s go in there and spank these kids — the Taliban, I mean — and do what we gotta do and get the job done and over with. If not, totally pull out of there. Sometimes, you know, like with our own children. They have to grow up. You push ’em out of the nest for them to take care of themselves.

You know, and I don’t want these people — thousands and thousands — getting on a plane and coming back to our country because what’s gonna end up happening is that you’re gonna have some of the Taliban mixed in with the, quote-unquote, good people coming in. So you’re gonna have these wolves mixed in with sheep, if you know what I mean.

CLAY: Yeah. No doubt. And thank you, by the way. Buck, we’ve had so many different veterans who have been weighing in. We wanted to get as many different of your calls as we could. And we want to thank for their service and let you know that unlike a lot of people in the media, we’re not just gonna abandon the story in (chuckles) two days, right?

Like, this is a major threat going forward. Buck, you probably don’t need to hear it from me, but of all the people who are talking on the radio today about Afghanistan, you have direct personal experience in Afghanistan, candidly, in a way that very few do, which is why I think it’s important to let you have the final closing thoughts here.

BUCK: Well, I appreciate that, Clay. Yeah my time on the CIA’s Afghanistan desk was certainly eye opening. And what we’re seeing right now — in essence, now, looking at it from the perspective of somebody who was reading the reported and getting a sense from the generals on down of what was really happening in the country, and speaking to different SF units and guys who are out there on the front lines about what they were seeing.

This notion of building an Afghanistan that was going to be able to stand on its own ever was just… It looks like a fiction now, and it should have been clear to the American people a long time ago that that’s what our leadership was pushing us into. But as you said, we’ll continue to follow this story in the days ahead. It’s gonna be… It has massive implications, not just for the international community, but, of course, for the U.S., its view of itself and the world and domestic politics too.

Recent Stories

C&B Predict Biden Speech Spin

16 Aug 2021

CLAY: Buck, I’m curious for this 3:45 talk, which I’m sure we’re going to be discussing a great deal tomorrow. Do you think Biden is primarily going to focus on blaming Trump, or do you think he’s going to try to just put this behind him? What’s your expectation? Because I have my thoughts, too, of what this address a couple of hours from now is gonna sound like.

BUCK: I think he’s going to try to take a sweeping view of history, Grandpa Joe fireside chat approach to this. So essentially it will be, “This has been 20 years. There’s been a lot of mistakes made. There’s been a lot of challenge here. Our men and women in uniform served honorably.”

CLAY: Honorably.

BUCK: Yeah, you could expect the commander-in-chief to say certain things. And then I think he’s going to say, “This was what we inherited from the Trump administration as the timeline. We extended it. This was not gonna be easy, but we believe it’s the right move.” He’s gotta project some belief in competency here because otherwise people are gonna start saying… When I say “people,” obviously you and I are already there. But there will be folks who change their minds about this regime and Biden based on this.

CLAY: I think it’s already happened.

BUCK: Yeah, that’s what they’re trying to avoid here, and I think they’re realizing now. You go down the list, Clay: Tthe border, the economy, inflation, crime in major U.S. cities, and now Afghanistan. What is the major power — and of course the covid surge here and the covid authoritarianism and forever covid. What are they doing well?

CLAY: He’s the opposite of “everything he touches turns to gold.” We can’t say exactly what the opposite of gold would be, but you can think about what it might be. Everything Biden touches turns to crap, effectively. I think that’s the fear now. And, by the way, the silence for so many days, and the idea of people being out to on vacation. I just want to continue to hammer this home.

If either you or I had been on vacation we would have wanted to come on today. We would have gotten probably on the phone from wherever we might have been and said, “Hey, I want to weigh in; this is a big story. I don’t want to just miss this Monday,” right? I imagine. We need to talk about this off the air, but one of our pledges would be when really big stories happen we’re gonna try to be there for you even if we happen to be on vacation.

BUCK: Of course.

CLAY: Biden, you can’t reach him. You’ve got Jen Psaki can’t be reached. Who knows what they got Kamala Harris doing right now! It’s not only the disaster that you’re seeing happen on television. It’s that there isn’t even any acknowledgment or discussion of it from the Biden White House that is in any way remotely defensible.

BUCK: Right, because first and foremost the optics are what they’re most concerned about, because the prospect of losing domestic political power is what keeps them awake.

CLAY: Which is real.

BUCK: That’s what keeps Democrats up at night. It’s not really what’s happening in Afghanistan — and I’m just gonna say this. There will be… There already have been reports. The Taliban are putting out some of these videos… By the way, you know, the Taliban has a Twitter account.

CLAY: Wow. Yes.

BUCK: So they can make women dress up like beekeepers and they can do all these things that they do and atrocities and beheadings and all that stuff. They get to keep their Twitter account. Donald Trump, however, does not. Just think about that.

CLAY: That is a tremendous failure —

BUCK: That is worth pointing out.

CLAY: — when it happens with Iran and all these other countries that are basically destroying human rights.

BUCK: It’s gonna get ugly, folks, uglier than what you’re already seeing; so be prepared for that. And the Biden administration right now is gonna try to set a narrative where this was… Here’s the fundamental lie, and I want us all to be very clear about this. The narrative, Clay, will be, “This had to happen.”

CLAY: This way. It was impossible to avoid.

BUCK: “It was impossible to avoid this circumstance,” and I just want you to know that is not true. And, in fact, they promised you a month ago that it is not true. So this will be thermonuclear-level gaslighting. Be prepared for that to happen.

CLAY: Not only did they say a month ago, 5-1/2 weeks ago to be exact, that this wasn’t gonna happen, they said it was impossible to happen!

BUCK: Or “highly unlikely,” I think, would be Biden words.

CLAY: And now they are going to bring it back and try to claim, I think to your point, that it was all inevitable, even though 5-1/2 weeks ago some quotes, Joe Biden, the Taliban takeover was, quote, “not inevitable.” Also, they’re gonna try to try to avoid the Saigon on steroids reality because they’re gonna claim that this isn’t 1975 and this isn’t Vietnam all over again even though I think anyone with a functional brain says that it is.

BUCK: The South Vietnamese actually did continue on the fight against a heavily outside-backed communist regime in the north. There was no continuing to fight here, Clay.

CLAY: Yeah, they just laid down their arms.

BUCK: This fight was over. They’re just like, “We’re done.” So, in a sense, you could argue this is even worse.

CLAY: A trillion dollars, to say nothing, Buck, of all of the injuries and deaths from all the veterans that we’re hearing from. I’m not sure a trillion dollars has ever been spent with less to show for it than what we’re seeing now in Afghanistan.

BUCK: From a policy level, it’s about as ignominious an end as you could get. As our friend Sean Parnell says, “The suits, not the boots,” deserve the blame here.

Recent Stories

Matt Walsh on Mask Madness and Afghanistan Fallout

16 Aug 2021

CLAY: We are pleased to be joined by Matt Walsh from The Daily Wire right now. He is @MattWalshBlog on Twitter. He also now lives in Nashville. You’re a father of four and fired up at the absurdity of the mask mandates that are taking place for kids, and we talked about this last week. I went to Williamson County, which is the county south of where Nashville is, on Tuesday. Wednesday you went and spoke as a parent against the mask mandate in the city of Nashville. What was your experience like? And thanks for being here with us.

MATT: Yeah, thanks for having me in. It was a little different from your experience, I think, because there was probably a larger contingent of pro-mask parents. I’d say it was about 50-50.

CLAY: In Nashville?

MATT: In Nashville, yeah. I could tell that the anti-mask parents… I don’t like to say “anti-mask.” Pro-constant sanity, pro-reasonable policy. I am anti-mask but there are plenty of parents who have no problem with masks in general.

CLAY: (chuckling) Amen.

MATT: They just don’t think their kids should be forced to wear it. Anyway, on the pro-sanity side, I could tell that there was some organization that happened, an effort to bring parents out. On the pro-mask side, there wasn’t as much for that organization. For me, it was kind of revealing because I was like number 20 to speak on the list.

CLAY: How many people did they allow to speak?

MATT: There were 50 people on the list and a lot of people didn’t show up.

CLAY: Yes.

MATT: So, I don’t know, maybe 30 actually spoke. We got kicked out before the end because they told us we had to wear masks. They decided like towards the end if you’re in the building you have to wear a mask —

CLAY: Oh, that’s just perfect.

MATT: — or you can leave, and so I said, “All right, I’ll just leave.” But it was sort of revealing to watch all of these pro-mask parents get up there because they were truly terrified — they were shaking and trembling in fear — that their children would die if another child without a mask on breathed near them, and I can tell that they really believed that.

They had been so taken by media propaganda that they really believed that a child without a mask would murder their child, and that was kind of revealing to me, because I wasn’t sure how much these parents had really bought into this or are they more concerned that they would get sick? Do they really think their children’s lives hang in the balance? And they do, at least from what I saw.

BUCK: So are they, based on what you were hearing — and again, I find the parents who are who are terrified… It’s very sad, but it’s also very important to get to the bottom of it because there are definitely teachers union representatives, folks like that who are playing politics with the masks in school, or it’s about they’re worried that adults are gonna get sick, right?

There’s that component. But for people who actually think that it’s a big risk to kids, Matt, are they just unfamiliar with the actual statistics and numbers? Do they not know? Did that come across? We’re getting into the one-in-100,000 kind of a number of fatalities for children who get this virus. Were they just ignorant of it, or do they not care? How does that brain process work? To the best of your ability, explain it to us.

MATT: I think it’s a little bit of both. A lot of it is also human narrate. I think a lot of people, they don’t find data and statistics to be all that compelling emotionally. What drives most people is anecdotes. So what I heard was just a succession of one anecdote after another people getting up there and saying, “Oh, I know a child that this happened,” or, “I know someone who knows someone that this happened.”

And then when it was my turn to speak, I said, “Okay, well, here are the statistics: 42 million children have contracted covid that we know of — probably a lot more than that — and 350, thereabouts, according to CDC by August had died of covid.” Assuming all that’s accurate, that is a mortality rate of like 0.008%. In the overall child population of the country 0.0004% of them have died by covid. They’re more likely to drown in a bathtub. They’re more likely, of course, to die of the flu, which is a really important point here. And you try to lay all that out. I know I’m not the first person make these points. You’ve made these points many time, Clay. But there is this kind of… It’s like you’re talking to a brick wall.

CLAY: Yeah, they don’t want to hear it.

MATT: They don’t want to hear it.

BUCK: I just said to Clay before you came in, we’ve gone into true religious symbolism now.

MATT: Yeah.

BUCK: Meaning, your belief in the face of contravening evidence about masks becomes more evidence of your devotion to the Fauci-ite masking religion. And I think if people double down on this even against facts. I mean, we look at the data on mandate cities versus nonmandate cities or mandate counties and when you line them up it’s just not possible to look at this and think that they’re a successful intervention tool.

We had Dr. Marty Makary on the show recently; he’s written in the Wall Street Journal a bunch of times about covid stuff, Matt. He said people forget that masks were the fourth mitigation tool in he remembers it of importance, right? Number one was, what, separating people, right, or essentially social distancing and keeping the sick away from other people.

So when do you think there will be more of a wake-up for those who still cling to this? I just came from New York where I had to get vaccinated to be able to go to my own brother’s wedding this week in New York City, full stop, no exceptions made. When do you think people realize how insane and authoritarian that has really become?

MATT: I think… I’m not the guy for silver linings. So if there is a rosy picture at the end of this, if there’s light at the end of the tunnel, I’m not the guy to point it out. I’m more of a doom-and-gloom type, I guess. So I would say that I think we’re at the point where if you’re still fully invested in the mask cult, then I don’t see how you’re ever gonna be rescued from it.

I think there are people that will be masking, really, for the rest of their lives. Part of it is people aren’t aware of statistics or don’t care. But also for a lot of people their ability to assess risk and to come up with proportional responses to that risk has been utterly obliterated. So you’ll hear them say things like that, “Well, better safe than sorry,” and, “There is a risk; it mitigates it.”

CLAY: “If we can save even one life”?

MATT: “If we can save even one life.” Of course, if you try to operate that way, “as long as we can save one life,” well, then you would never drive a car. You’d never leave your house.

CLAY: Yes.

MATT: You’d never do anything. Driving your car is a really important point, because when you get in a car… Every time I you my kids in a car and I drive somewhere, even with seat belt —

CLAY: Yes.

MATT: — I know that they might die. I might actually kill them accidentally in the car. I might. I probably won’t; thank God I don’t. But I might. You know, you could do that. And yet you choose to do it anyway, because you’ve assessed that, although there’s a risk and it’s a terrible thing that could happen, the risk is not great enough to adjust your lifestyle to that extent.

CLAY: Putting that into perspective in particular, because I do think — and Buck and I try to do this on our show, and I know you try to do this with your audience too. Hammering home facts and data: 1- to 4-year-old kids drowning? You have 2.8 in 100,000 people drown, all right? Well, 0.2 have died of covid. Drowning, vehicle accidents — as you just mentioned — homicide, cancer, cardiovascular disease, the flu, the seasonal flu, suffocation.

All of these are wildly in excess in terms of death for kids under 14 years old. And yet we have almost no discussion about them. I was talking with my wife this weekend, and she said, “We need South Park to do an episode on pools shouldn’t be allowed, because far more kids drown than ever are impacted by covid.”

BUCK: Yeah, and if you want to keep your swimming pool in your backyard, you want kids to drown since you’re a bad person.

CLAY: You want kids to drown and die. Right.

BUCK: That’s the logic of the masks.

CLAY: From a satirical perspective. It’s as if people don’t care about this data, and you tell them, and it comes back to that anecdote where they saw something on social media and it’s the driving force.

BUCK: Yeah, so they don’t accept the data, they don’t care about the data, Matt, but also over the weekend we saw some new numbers out of… Now it’s Martha’s Vineyard I think in general but they had 74 confirmed cases, which this is a “highly sophisticated and vaccinated” population in general in Martha’s Vineyard but specifically the Obama birthday bash.

I think part of this was that has been the hardest to swallow for a lot of, folks, is how much and how blatant the hypocrisy of the controlling elites has been about the covid lockdowns. Do you think that might be more powerful than the numbers when all is said and done, when people finally realize that the people telling you to be terrified of covid aren’t themselves actually terrified of covid in a lot of cases?

MATT: Maybe that will do it. If that was gonna do it, then I would hope that it would have already, that would have sunk in for a lot of people. Because we’ve been able to tell that from the very beginning, that the people, as you say, who are telling us to be afraid of it aren’t afraid of it themselves.

That’s why I personally, with the Obama’s birthday thing, yeah… Well, in a way it’s not really hypocrisy because they’ve actually been pretty consistent about this the entire time. They’ve been pretty consistent that they are important people and so they get to have different rules and they get to do important people things and we’re not important, so we don’t get to do these things.

BUCK: So this is like the Lori Lightfoot haircut thing. “I’m public face.”

MATT: Right. Exactly. They’ve actually pretty explicit about that but, by the way, I think the lesson we take from that is just to do as they do ’cause they’re not worried about it. They want to have a birthday party and celebrate and eat, drink, and be merry. So go ahead and do that because also the other thing is, covid is out there. I think we need to start talking about this, that it’s out there; it’s probably gonna be out there forever.

It’s probably endemic at this point. Even the so-called public health experts, to the extent that we trust them, which is not at all. But even they’ll tell you that. So it’s always going to be there, so you have to figure out a way to live with that reality as this thing that’s lurking out there that probably wouldn’t you do you any harm but could. Certainly our elites have done that. They realize that it’s out there, but they rather enjoy their birthday.

BUCK: We’ll bring Matt back here to talk a little bit more about the Biden administration, maybe even some Afghanistan talk. We want to get his take on it, Matt Walsh of The Daily Wire with us here in studio.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

BUCK: Here in studio with Clay and joined by our guest today, Matt Walsh of The Daily Wire. Matt, one thing over the weekend with all the craziness in Afghanistan that kept coming up, at least in my mind, was how many disasters, how many terrible decisions with the Biden administration get away with before it’s clear that this isn’t gonna be like Jimmy Carter. It’s looking like it’s gonna be worse than Jimmy Carter.

MATT: Yeah, I mean, look. I think with the speech coming up from Biden, I don’t know exactly what to expect. I know that some people on Twitter are hoping that… (laughing) that he resigns, which I tend to doubt. But even that —

CLAY: (laughing) “Tend to doubt”? That would be a blockbuster of all blockbusters.

MATT: But even that, I’m not sure we would celebrate that because that means we would get Kamala Harris. I’m not sure that’s a better circumstance. But I think with the Afghanistan thing for me, it’s important to draw this line, to walk a line. Because on one hand I think we can all agree that the withdrawal has been handled horribly.

That’s one thing. It’s one of those rare circumstances where everybody agrees on both sides of the aisle. But at the same time, this is something that needed to happen. It’s happened in the wrong way, but we did need to leave, I think. I also think it’s strange — and I’m not an expert myself in Afghanistan.

But then we know that the experts have failed us, so we just have to use our common sense and try to navigate these issues, whether it’s covid or this. But I also look at the fact that, you know, Afghanistan allegedly had an army of 300,000 people, Biden claimed.

BUCK: Mmm-hmm.

MATT: And they, what, didn’t fire a shot and gave up as soon as the American military leaves?

CLAY: (laughing) Yeah. They made the French in World War II look like die hard fighters.

BUCK: In the early days, there were some small units that were willing to fight it out and I think unfortunately very bad things were done to them when they surrendered. But as an overall cohesive force, yes, it was just… In fact, they had military units that handed over their gear and the leadership took payment from the Taliban to not fight right away, right off the bat.

MATT: I think that if a country has no will to exist, I don’t know how long we can prop it into existence. I know there’s this comparison I’ve seen on social media a lot saying that, hey, we’ve got bases in Germany and Japan.

BUCK: Germany, Japan. Those countries aren’t at war still. They don’t have active insurgencies still.

MATT: We could argue about whether we should have bases there, but they are countries anyway. We are not propping up this house of cards simply by being there like we are with Afghanistan. It just seems like there are a lot of people in the ruling class especially who say this should be an indefinite situation where we hold this country into existence for unclear reasons indefinitely. I don’t see how we can do that.

BUCK: That became the argument, that actually they think that referring to “forever war” is something that now blows back on the other side. “Oh, your forever war sending; look what happens.” But really the alternative of this is just the permanent presence. There are some people that are still making that case, by the way, which I think is a weak one but there are people who make it.

MATT: Yeah, and this also goes both ways, by the way, because each member of each country has to defend itself. The country has to defend itself and exist for its own sake. But that also is the case for us, because we have plenty of crises here in America to focus on. Even if I were to agree in theory that it’s a good idea to go across the world and build nations and so forth and be an imperial force, are we equipped right now to do that, even if it was a good idea, which I don’t think it is? I would say not.

CLAY: What about the domestic impact for the international failure, big picture, right? We can talk about the experts have failed against, but does Joe Biden bear a significant consequence domestically for what happened in a foreign country right now in Afghanistan, or a week from now has the average American completely forgotten about Afghanistan and everybody just kind of moves on and the long-range impact here is not significant? What is the legacy here?

MATT: Yeah, I think it’s the latter. The average American these days we have the memory of a housefly. We’ve seen this play out so many times where there’s this big story the media’s talking about, it’s a huge scandal, whoever the president happens to be and we’re told, “Ah, they’re never gonna live this down,” and then a week later no one’s talking about it. It’s like ancient history.

CLAY: Yeah.

MATT: That’s actually one of the stories about the American people and our culture — one of the most important stories — is our inability to focus on one thing and care about it for more than seven days or even seven hours many times.

CLAY: Yeah, and social media has exacerbated what was already that trajectory, right, to the point where everybody has the memory of a goldfish.

MATT: Yeah, exactly, ’cause there’s always a million things going on in the world and sometimes it’s a matter of which thing should I focus on? And then a lot of people outsource that discernment to the media, and the media tells us, “Oh, well, here’s what you should focus on now. That’s old news. Now focus on this instead.”

BUCK: Isn’t it amazing, Matt, to watch as they pretend now that it is, at least the withdrawal, an utter catastrophe — everybody can see it, it couldn’t be more obvious — now they’re asking the tough questions for a day or two in the Biden administration as if that’s something to be celebrated or it would be better if they’d asked questions before the whole thing fell apart.

MATT: Yeah. I saw the interview with Jake Tapper where he was —

BUCK: That’s his whole thing.! He asks the hard questions where there’s no other choice; then he wants a pat on the back.

MATT: Yeah.

BUCK: He’s the biggest of the frauds in my opinion. Go ahead.

MATT: Yeah. I also think it’s interesting that this is the one thing… Although it was handled terribly, again. But leaving Afghanistan is the one thing that the media decides to hold Joe Biden to account for. I find that interesting as well.

CLAY: Quickly, what’s the Ravens’ record gonna be this year? For people who are out there NFL fans, you’re a big Baltimore Raven fan.

MATT: I’m gonna go 13-3.

CLAY: You’ve got 17, remember?

MATT: Oh yeah.

CLAY: So 13-4? You think you’re gonna win the AFC North?

MATT: So 14-3, yeah. I’ll go 14-3. That’s based on nothing but that fact that I’m a homer. (laughing)

CLAY: They’ve been good. It’s gonna be interesting to see.

MATT: Undefeated in the preseason. Come on. That’s gotta count for something.

CLAY: Twenty-five games in a row or whatever the heck it is? Unheard of. He is Matt Walsh. Encourage you to go follow him @MattWalshBlog.

Recent Stories

CNN Reporter: “Chanting ‘Death to America!’ But They Seem Friendly”

16 Aug 2021

CLAY: CNN has a reporter on the ground, and we’ll play this audio for you. Now, to her credit, she is reporting on the ground surrounded by the Taliban. But this has a “mostly peaceful protest” feel to it. Here’s what CNN was reporting earlier today.

CLARISSA WARD: They’re just chanting, “Death to America!” but they seem friendly at the same time. It’s utterly bizarre.

CLAY: Oh, “Death to America,” and also friendly at the same time. Sounds like just the people you’d like to have over for Thanksgiving.

BUCK: I guess I’m glad that she at least admits that’s a bizarre dichotomy she is setting up there for us.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: And that’s a reporter from CNN, who’s still on the ground in Kabul as all this is unfolding. Clay, I do think we’ve also seen really one of the first times here that the usual pro-Biden partisans in the media, they tried —

CLAY: That’s a good point. They disappeared.

BUCK: Well, they tried a lot of things in the beginning. They tried, oh, the Trump thing, and everyone’s looking at them like, “This is a serious issue, and you are being unserious with your talking points bull crap.”

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: The usual spin doesn’t work when you have video of the actual airport and people running out onto the tarmac desperately fleeing for their lives. They can’t spin this, is what I’m saying. This is a first. They’ve ignored the border. They can’t really spin it, but they’ve tried. They’ve been able to ignore it. You can’t ignore what’s happening now in this country.

CLAY: That’s a good point. After seven months of defending anything, basically, that Joe Biden would do, and it’s also not only all of the surrogates that would usually be out there defending Joe Biden, Buck. I think it’s also they’re not gonna defend Biden when the White House goes silent, when everybody’s on vacation. There’s a lot of times where you have to be your own advocate.

And that’s what Biden’s gonna try to do at 3:45. We’ll see if he’s capable of it. I have severe reservations about that. But that’s a really good point that basically they have abandoned the field in the same way that we are abandoning Afghanistan. There’s nobody really trying to defend the Biden administration at all right now.

BUCK: It’s indefensible —

CLAY: That’s the answer. That’s the answer.

BUCK: — truly indefensible, what’s happening here. If you think the corporate media’s learned any lessons about foisting Biden on us despite all the common sense and history that you could bring to bear to show that he’s an incompetent mediocrity, I gotta tell you, think again. They will… Just give it a number of days, Clay, and CNN, the top story will be something about the January 6 insurrection and Fauci demanding masks.

They’ve gotta cover this now because it’s the biggest story in the world by far, but there’s no lessons learned from this. Anything is better, in their mind — in the corporate Democrat media’s mind, anything, including the abject collapse of Afghanistan, this calamity, better — than having Trump as president, in their mind. That’s how deranged they are with Trump Derangement Syndrome.

CLAY: I got a friend who worked in the Trump White House texted me this, this morning. He said (I’m reading directly from what he said), “I couldn’t help but imagine if we were still in the White House. My phone would probably have been ringing nonstop starting Saturday and Sunday.

“My inbox would be full of statements from woke companies and trade associations condemning our decision and administration while Afghan women and children are left to suffer. Where are those companies now? They’re silent. I guess it’s okay when it’s Afghanistan human rights abuses. But my God. Imagine what happens if Trump is still in office.” It’s well said.

Recent Stories

Bewildered Biden Blames Trump, But Nobody’s Buying It

16 Aug 2021

POMPEO: He should be less focused on trying to blame this on someone else than solving the problem of making sure that we protect and defend American security. Chris, it’s worth noting: This did not happen on our watch. We reduced our forces significantly. The Taliban didn’t advance on capitals all across Afghanistan.

So, it’s just a plain old fact that this is happening under the Bush administration’s leadership now almost a quarter of the way into his first term. This is this is not the way leaders lead by pointing backwards. We had a bad deal we inherited, the JCPOA. We got out of it. We secured America from the risk from Iran.

We inherited a horrible deal in Syria where ISIS controlled real estate the size of Great Britain. We crushed them! Every president confronts challenges. This president confronted a challenge in Afghanistan. He has utterly failed to protect the American people from this challenge.

BUCK: Welcome back to the Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show. Clay and I together here in Nashville, Tennessee, as Afghanistan collapses. Kabul is in the hands of the Taliban, and the airport, the last territory in the hands of U.S. forces in control right now, the Kabul airport, surrounded by Taliban forces. Evacuation flights are going on as I speak to you now.

The tarmac is being swarmed with desperate Afghans trying to grab on to the landing gears, trying to do just anything to get out country. Already reports of reprisal killings. There will be large-scale executions of anybody left behind who worked with the U.S. We know this. It’s terrible. How could the Biden administration have been so inept and unprepared in all of this?

Clay and I want to hear from veterans ’cause we know we have a huge veteran audience that listens to this show, and we thank you, first of all, for your service. And we also want to remind everybody that there’s a reason why, when our soldiers were in that country, the Taliban were hiding, usually in Pakistan.

They were going across the border, laying low. They were hiding. And the moment that we decided we’re gonna hand the fight over to the Afghan National Army, that’s when the Taliban knew it was time to go. 800-282-2882 on the lines. We’d love to get some veterans in. Clay, there’s so many fascinates of this. You’re gonna have a lot of speculation in the days ahead about the relationship that the new Taliban government — which I think we all know is absolutely inevitable right now — will have with China and Russia and Pakistan and Iran.

We’re also gonna be talking about the possibility of Afghanistan as a platform for global jihadist terror attacks once again. But, in the meantime, Biden on vacation. Did you see that photo which, by the way, that’s not the kind of photo that they should be sharing out in a moment like that and there was also a bunch of stuff on the screen that I was very surprised —

CLAY: Yeah.

BUCK: — that they were actually sharing what they did. I can tell you that much. It really was an iconic moment of a president who looks bewildered and alone at a moment when we’re supposed to have leadership that we can count on.

CLAY: Also, he’s afraid to say anything for fear, I believe, that he will immediately be wrong. I imagine what they were trying to do was avoid having him talk until they had gotten all American citizens out. But I think you talked about the big question in Afghanistan going forward is going to be, “Will Afghanistan under the Taliban, again become a fertile ground for the planning of another 9/11-esque attack?”

But I think we can just think about this domestically, Buck. What does this do to Joe Biden domestically? What does it do with the failure of all of his administration to handle this retreat out of Afghanistan with any semblance of competency? What does it do for the covid experts out there? What does it do for trust in this administration in general? What does it do for his larger budget plan?

He’s trying to get this $3.5 trillion budget plan rammed through, and there are all sorts of controversies emerging inside of the Democratic caucus where you’ve got congressmen who are moderates that are saying, “Hey, we’re not gonna vote for this $3.5 trillion until we have the infrastructure bill come through.”

To me, Buck, this is did he give you to any sort of argument that Joe Biden is competent on any level multiply, and I think it impacts so many different aspects of his administration going forward. Because the American people watching this — Democrats, Republicans, independents — most of us in living memory, Buck, the majority of Americans have never seen something this incompetent occur on a foreign soil with American military.

BUCK: Well, there’s a difference between experts and opportunists, and you’re seeing that. Joe Biden is an opportunist. He’s a guy who did whatever he had to do for the 40 years in Democrat politics to get reelected as the senator from Delaware. No offense to Delaware. Great beaches, nice state, but not exactly a place that’s at the center of the political storm on a regular basis.

Joe Biden’s a machine politician. On foreign policy specifically — which was, you remember, his calling card for vice president under the Obama administration. It was, “Oh, Joe Biden is a great foreign policy, a steady hand, a foreign policy mind,” and if you actually listen to anybody who had worked in those circles because there is a foreign policy apparatus.

I’ve worked at some of the think tanks and obviously spent time at the CIA and know some of these characters who have been at the top of the decision-making process, they would all tell you, Joe Biden was — the famous line was from Bob Gates, who was secretary of defense and CIA director — “reliably wrong on every major for the purpose of decision for the horizontal.”

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: So how could anybody view what’s going on right now as in any way a surprise in that framework? And I would also say that if you’re talking about real experts Clay, just because somebody is the national security adviser or secretary of state, as we all know, doesn’t mean…

Those are hard jobs to get the, but it doesn’t mean that you’re the best at the job. True Afghanistan experts for the last 20 years have been saying, “They call it the graveyard of empires for a reason. The Taliban is not going anywhere with the Pakistani sanctuary.” They’ve been beating the same drum and now they’re all looking at us saying, “We told you so.”

CLAY: How about Joe Biden has been wrong in virtually every major foreign policy decision over the last 40 years and now his mental faculties are declined from the 40 years of failure? Because I genuinely want to know how he’s going to be capable at 3:45 Eastern of sitting in front of the American people or standing, however he’s going to give this address, and doing anything other than reading directly off the teleprompter what he is going to say.

BUCK: Can I make a prediction? You like predictions.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: I’ll make a prediction for what Biden’s gonna say. And we’ll come back to this tomorrow. He’s going to say that this was a tough call but the right call for the American people, that moved a little faster than they thought but they basically were prepared. They had contingencies in place — and, oh, by the way, this is Trump’s timeline for withdrawal. They actually extended it so they should get credit for not going too fast on it. Orange Man Bad. Blame Trump,” and then he’s gonna walk off stage.

CLAY: No doubt.

BUCK: I think that’s the only move he’s got at this point.

CLAY: There’s no doubt he’s gonna blame Trump. The counter to that is, I even wonder whether the general media is going to accept that because he spent seven months changing every decision that Donald Trump made.

BUCK: Oh, and he took credit, by the way, for the changes in the timeline, and Kamala, who he should have made the Afghanistan czar, by the way.

CLAY: Yeah. Yes.

BUCK: Throw her under the bus once again, so to speak. Kamala was leaking that she was also involved in this process a few months ago and it seemed like she stands astride the foreign policy stage. I don’t think she’s leaking anymore about that right now.

CLAY: Where is she?

Recent Stories

Blinken: We Succeeded in Afghanistan!

16 Aug 2021

CLAY: It is absolute madness as we speak, the Taliban taking back over all of Afghanistan. Buck, we played Joe Biden and showed how totally out of it Joe Biden was. But it’s worth mentioning the secretary of state, Tony Blinken. Remember, these were supposed to be the “adults” that would bring back normalcy, bring back diplomacy, bring back a semblance of American exceptionalism. That’s the argument they made, the experts.

BUCK: Right. Who are gone right now, Clay! Where are these experts all of a sudden?

CLAY: They’re all faded. But let’s listen. We played Biden in July. Let’s listen to Tony Blinken, expert secretary of state back in June. He said (summarized), “No way the Taliban’s gonna go from a Friday to a Monday taking over the country!” Oh, by the way, it took a little bit less than that.

BLINKEN: I don’t think it’s going to be something that happens from a Friday to a Monday. Uh, so I wouldn’t, uhhh, necessarily equate the departure of our forces, uhh, in July, August, or by early September with some kind of immediate, uhhh, deterioration, uhh, in the, uh… in the situation.

CLAY: We didn’t even get them out of the country before things deteriorated, Buck! We weren’t even out! We weren’t even leaving ’til the end of August.

BUCK: Clay, it’s almost like you could have set the actual Taliban battle plan by whatever the Biden administration and top officials said would not happen. The Taliban was saying, “That sounds like a good idea. Let’s give that a shot!” This is an outrageous failure from the top down, and it’s just a reminder as well — and I think this is a place where we’re gonna have to have a lot more introspection and conversation.

Clearly, the U.S. government view of what was going on in Afghanistan — again, going back to a decade ago when I’m in country, we’re doing all the assessments, Clay. This was all this talk of shadow governance, of the Taliban actually providing services for people in areas, of providing Sharia courts, of paying people off, of having the police on the payroll, all of that.

This was a decade ago. They basically were already in position to run and overrun the whole country. And it’s like all the sudden our elected officials it no idea? At least the Biden White House had no idea? How is that even possible?

CLAY: And how about the disrespect? They weren’t even willing to wait ’til the end of August when we were leaving to take over the country. They aid, “Screw it. We’ll go ahead and do it to embarrass the Americans while they’re still here.” By the way, Tony Blinken also, he said, “Hey, guys, no matter what your eyes are telling you, this is not Saigon.” He said, “We succeeded in the Afghanistan mission. Listen to this. This is what he just said.

BLINKEN: No, we’re not! Remember, this is not Saigon. We went to Afghanistan 20 years ago with one mission, and that mission was to deal with the folks who attacked us on 9/11. And we have succeeded in that mission! The objective in a we set, bringing, uh, those who attacked us to justice, uhh, making sure that they couldn’t attack us again from Afghanistan, we’ve succeeded in that mission. Uh, and in fact, we succeeded a while ago. Uh, and at the same time, uh, remaining in Afghanistan for another f… one, five, 10 years is not in the national interest.

BUCK: So why did we stay there for the last 10 years, Mr. Blinken? We’ll answer these questions and coming back and give you real time updates about the catastrophe in Kabul and around the country in Afghanistan. It’s on the Biden administration. Don’t let them evade accountability.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

CLAY: Secretary of State Tony Blinken, one of the big questions that is out there is, “Will we end up with Afghanistan as a breeding ground for terrorism again?” He was asked, the secretary of state was, about that. Play cut 7.

BLINKEN: Jake, we have, uhh, tremendously more capacity than we had before 9/11 when it comes, uh, to counterterrorism. In places around the world where we don’t have forces on the ground, in Yemen, uhh, in parts of, uh — of Africa, in parts of Syria we’re able to deal with any potential terrorist threat, uhh, to our country and we’re doing that, uh, every single day.

We’re going to retain, uh — in, uhhhh, in the region the over-the-horizon capacity, we call it, to see and deal with any reemergence, uhh, of — of a terrorist threat. And look, uh, I can’t tell you what, uhhh (snickers) what the Taliban is going to do. But again in their self-interests, uh, allow a repeat of what happened before 9/11 — which is a terrorist group to reemerge in Afghanistan that has designs on the United States — well, they know what happened last time. So I don’t think it’s in their self-interest to allow that to happen again.

CLAY: Okay. Blinken, Buck, has been pretty much the only Biden administration official who has been talking at all for the past several days. Now, again, in about an hour Joe Biden is scheduled to speak from the White House about the situation on the ground in Afghanistan. You just got, Buck, talking points from Nancy Pelosi’s crew.

But you know, I would say, almost as much, it feels like, as Tony Blinken does about Afghanistan. I think for people out there who may not care as much about foreign entanglements, should we be worried now that we’re completely out of Afghanistan that we are going to create another breeding ground for the next iteration, however it might arise to become a reality of a 9/11-type attack?

BUCK: Well, this is the center of the debate right now for what comes next, because the humanitarian catastrophe that’s unfolding right now — there would be executions, there will be women who are effectively enslaved, there will be abuse of children on a horrific scale — that’s happening, unfortunately. That’s going to happen with the Taliban and already is happening.

So then the “What do we have to think about from a U.S. policy?” perspective going forward, and that’s where you get into the will it become a jihadist safe haven? That would be the term. Or a platform for the global jihad. And I’ve gotta say that the over-the-horizon capabilities — and by that they tend to mean manned and unmanned flight.

So that’s using drones and using strike aircraft and bombers when necessary to go in and attack targets. It’s very hard to think that given what we’ve just seen here, Clay, that our intelligence capabilities — our intelligence gathering and knowledge and on-the-ground assistance in a place like Afghanistan — is going to be sufficient for us to use those over-the-horizon capabilities to strike at whatever it is that we think is a threat.

We are now losing so much visibility in Afghanistan as we’re drawing down, that we’re going to be able to see things coming and deal with them effectively again using those long-range strike capabilities, I think that’s a rosy-thinking scenario here. I think that we’re gonna see the Afghanistan Taliban… They’ll probably consolidate for a while. They will spend time proving their governance model.

Believe it or not, one of the reasons they were particularly successful in the Pashtun areas of the country in the south, in places like Kandahar and Helmand — and one of the reasons they’re so successful — is that they were creating shadow governance for a long time and they do come in, and their orders are respected on the ground. Meaning the Taliban leadership’s orders will be respected on the ground.

So they’re gonna try to become a country. They’re gonna try to become a regime that actually has the Chinese, the Russians, and otherwise recognizing them. And then the question will be, “Well, is this just a place that’s a place where terrorists can gather, or will there be a true alliance of some kind?” I don’t know if there will ever be the true alliance there was with Al-Qaeda that we saw in the past.

It was pretty open that they were the homeland for Al-Qaeda in the past. But there could be something along those lines. I mean, there could be essentially safe space for the operation of certain terrorist groups. This is also, if you’re looking for a region of the world, we have dozens of terrorist groups operating in the AfPak region.

And we should also start to think of Afghanistan as essentially an extension of northwest Pakistan, and then it makes a lot more sense. So I know that the administration is gonna say, “Don’t worry, we’ve got this.” But, Clay, to put it really simply, given what we’ve just seen how can anyone listen to Tony Blinken and say, “You know what? I think they’ve got a handle on the situation.”

CLAY: This is where I think this foreign policy calamity rolls into the domestic disaster, which is — building on what you’re saying, Buck — based on what you are seeing on your televisions and have seen of the Taliban rise up and take over Afghanistan faster than any of the — and I’m doing this in quotation marks — “experts” told us was possible, how is it that you can trust in any way the experts on covid?

How is it that you can trust the experts on inflation? How is it that you can trust the experts on the border? How is it that you can trust the experts on crime? All of these areas, Joe Biden is already failing in. To me, this further undercuts the idea of expertise in his administration across the board. If they can be this wrong about Afghanistan, how can they be trusted? And we know how wrong they’ve been about covid already. But I think all that builds on each other.

BUCK: Well, this is one of the points of genius of Trump, actually, was that he was willing to call out the credentialed elites as phonies and frauds who make bad choices and other people suffer the consequences and there’s no accountability for them because they wrong to this system of the elites. It’s one of the things —

CLAY: Right. It’s easier to say, “Hey, there’s a way to succeed in Afghanistan,” because that keeps you in good stead in the military —

BUCK: Of course.

CLAY: — than to say, “Hey, guys we’re screwed here. We gotta watch out. Let’s get outta here.”

BUCK: There was a script if you were either a senior diplomat, intel official, military. There were things you had to say about Afghanistan so that when you’d be invited to think tank meetings, when you’d have a profile written about you in the Washington Post, you were considered one of the good, smart people. And if you broke with that consensus, then you risked personally your career, your aspirations.

CLAY: This is something, by the way, that happens to both of us, right? Because we’re breaking a lot of times with conventional wisdom in the way we talk about covid. We’re trying to be as honest as we can with our audience. You’re not part of groupthink right? Groupthink has its rewards. You’re a good guy, you’re a part of the crew, but you’re not necessarily telling the truth.

BUCK: Well, neither you nor I will ever be invited on the Stephen Colbert Show, for example late at night —

CLAY: (laughing) Yes.

BUCK: — whereas there will be people who are boring and useless and worthless from, say, CNN who will —

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: — because they’re part of, again, that elite apparatus. Speaking of which, I didn’t mean to skip past this, but Nancy Pelosi’s office has released the White House talking points on Afghanistan, and it’s base… This is the White House talking about Afghanistan: “The president was not willing to enter a third decade of conflict and surge thousands more troops.

“It’s clear from the past few weeks that would have been necessary: More troops for an indefinite amount of time. The administration knew there was a possibility Kabul would fall to the Taliban. It was not an inevitability. It was a possibility. The administration planned for every possibility. We had contingency plans in place. But indefinite war was unacceptable to the president.”

So, yeah, exactly what you would expect here, which is that they’re just pretending like this is not a complete and utter disaster and a catastrophe and a huge black eye for the Biden administration. They’re saying, “Oh, no, no! Don’t worry. This is pretty much exactly within the plan. That’s why we’re sending thousands more troops. The whole thing.” They pulled all the troops out. They could send 6,000 in to block, to get everybody back out. This is what we’re actually facing and dealing with right now.

Recent Stories

Rush Warned Us Obama and Biden Want to Lose Afghanistan

16 Aug 2021

Be sure to listen daily to Rush’s Timeless Wisdom podcast here or on iHeartRadio. It’s absolutely essential information from America’s Forever Anchorman.

Recent Stories

EIB 24/7: Clay & Buck’s Stack of Stuff

16 Aug 2021

  • BuckSexton.com: The Kabul Catastrophe is Biden’s Fault
  • FOXNews: Mainstream media crushes Biden for ‘flat-footed,’ ‘humiliating’ betrayal of Afghans as Taliban takes control
  • Breitbart: Watch: Desperate Afghans Try to Board U.S. Air Force Plane at Kabul Airport
  • Breitbart: CNN’s Ward: Taliban ‘Chanting ‘Death to America’ but They Seem Friendly at the Same Time’
  • Federalist: As Kabul Burns, Biden Is AWOL And Psaki Is On Vacation
  • Daily Wire: Top Biden Official: Biden ‘Stands By’ Decision To Withdraw From Afghanistan, Disaster ‘Unfolded At Unexpected Speed’
  • HotAir: NBC: The real story is how Republicans “seized” on Kabul-Saigon parallel, you know
  • National Review: Worse Than Saigon
  • Federalist: No, Biden Can’t Blame Trump For The Afghanistan Withdrawal Disaster

  • FOXNews: Army veteran Parnell slams general’s ‘woke’ Twitter trolling: ‘He’s not focused on the mission’
  • New York Post: NYC’s COVID vax mandate begins as businesses face new struggles
  • HotAir: Pelosi struggles to save infrastructure deal
  • NewsBusters: TV Media Desperately Conceal Biden’s Gaffes from Viewers
  • Daily Wire: ‘Limousine Liberals And Hollywood Wh*ring’: Famed NYT Columnist On Obama B-Day Bash
  • FOXNews: NYT’s Maureen Dowd rips Obama ‘orgy,’ enraging ex-prez’s Twitter admirers

  • Recent Stories