Thursday, March 21, 2024



Milley confirms he got piece of paper ordering full withdrawal from Afghanistan during final Trump days

ByMike Brest
March 19, 2024 

Shortly after former President Donald Trump lost his reelection bid in November 2020, then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley was given a piece of paper that called for the withdrawal of U.S. forces in Somalia and Afghanistan.

Milley, who has since retired as a general in the Army, told lawmakers that he received the note days after Trump fired then-Secretary of Defense Mark Esper in the aftermath of the election. The piece of paper, he told lawmakers on the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Tuesday, had the president’s signature on it and called for the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces from Somalia by Dec. 15, 2020, and from Afghanistan by Jan. 15, 2021.


“Acting Secretary of Defense [Christopher] Miller and I and others went over to the White House to confirm that order because we had not been consulted on that,” Milley explained. “So we did, and that order was then subsequently rescinded.”

Retired Gen. Mark Milley, left, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and retired Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, right, former commander of the U.S. Central Command, prepare to speak to the House Foreign Affairs Committee about the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, March 19, 2024.
 (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Roughly a week later, he received a new order from then-national security adviser Robert O’Brien, which called for the U.S. military to reduce its troop presence to 2,500.

News of the note emerged last November via a book by ABC News’s Jonathan Karl, who reported that it was not in fact written by Trump but by John McEntee, who was serving as director of the Presidential Personnel Office. Milley did not reveal in his testimony who gave him the note or who wrote it.

Military leaders, Milley included, recommended to President Joe Biden that the U.S. shouldn’t reduce its military footprint in Afghanistan below that threshold.

Despite their advice, Biden ordered the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan in April 2021. They ultimately withdrew at the end of August 2021, with the Taliban back in power and Afghans who had spent two decades working with U.S. forces concerned for their safety.

Milley and retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, the former commander of the U.S. Central Command, told lawmakers on the committee that the State Department was too slow in initiating a noncombatant evacuation operation. The State Department did not initiate the evacuation until the day before the Taliban overtook Kabul, about two weeks before the military’s impending withdrawal.

The number of Afghans who wanted to depart the country skyrocketed with the collapse of the government because the Taliban’s resurgence meant those who worked with the U.S. were now concerned about reprisals. The U.S. military was able to evacuate roughly 120,000 people in the last two weeks of August, but thousands of Afghan allies were left behind

Milley said the State Department’s delayed call for the evacuation was “the fundamental mistake.”

These evacuations were marred by the Abbey Gate bombing on Aug. 26, 2021, which claimed the lives of 13 U.S. service members and roughly 170 Afghan civilians. Dozens of U.S. troops were injured in the blast.

The House Foreign Affairs Committee is investigating the conclusion of the U.S.’s war in Afghanistan. Milley and McKenzie’s appearance in front of the committee marked their first times testifying on Capitol Hill since their retirements.

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