POLITICO Playbook: A reality check on Biden's presserIn his speech on Friday afternoon, President JOE BIDEN sought to project stability and competence, and to persuade both the U.S. and its allies that after days of chaos in Kabul, he finally had the situation in Afghanistan under control.
But as of Saturday morning, there appears to be quite a distance between reality as Biden described and, well reality a credibility gap that is dominating the coverage right now and could threaten Biden's standing with the public as the crisis stretches into its second week.
Here's a breakdown of the most yawning gaps between rhetoric and reality
What Biden said: "We have no indication that [Americans] haven't been able to get in Kabul through [to] the airport. Thus far, [the Taliban have] allowed them to go through." But just minutes later, that claim was contradicted by Defense Secretary LLOYD AUSTIN, who told House lawmakers in a Friday afternoon briefing that some Americans trying to flee Afghanistan "have been harassed and even beaten" by Taliban fighters a reality Austin called "unacceptable." More on that from Andrew Desiderio, Heather Caygle and Lara Seligman
This morning, the State Department sent out a security alert "advising U.S. citizens to avoid traveling to the airport," citing "potential security threats outside the gates."
What Biden said: "I have seen no question of our credibility from our allies around the world." Germany: "For those who believed in democracy and freedom, especially for women, these are bitter events," Chancellor ANGELA MERKEL said this week. The man she's endorsed as her successor, CDU leader ARMIN LASCHET, called the withdrawal "the biggest debacle that NATO has suffered since its founding."
U.K.: "It's sad that the West has done what it's done," said Defense Minister BEN WALLACE. From the same article: "[Biden] hasn't just humiliated America's Afghan allies," said RORY STEWART, a former British cabinet minister. "He's humiliated his Western allies by demonstrating their impotence."
France: In a call with Biden, President EMMANUEL MACRON emphasized that NATO has a "moral responsibility" to evacuate its Afghan allies a phrase found in the French readout of the call, but omitted from the U.S. readout, reports The Guardian's Joan Greve.
It's perhaps unsurprising that America's NATO partners might feel burned. Bloomberg's Alberto Nardelli reports that
"Biden told key allies in June that he would maintain enough of a security presence in Afghanistan to ensure they could continue to operate in the capital following the main U.S. withdrawal." That no longer appears to be the case.
"This looks like 'America First,' except that its officials can speak French," a former U.S. intelligence officer told FT's Edward Luce. He writes that the execution of the withdrawal has caused a "blurring between Biden and Trump" in the eyes of much of the international community.
It all amounts to a
growing credibility problem. The White House has long portrayed Biden as supremely competent and a straight-shooter, especially compared to the bumbling and lies of his predecessor. But the current reality in Afghanistan undercuts both aspects of that image of Biden.
WHAT'S MORE IMPORTANT?
You might imagine that the crisis in Afghanistan is the Biden administration's top priority at the moment. But it isn't at least according to senior White House adviser NEERA TANDEN.
"The No. 1 priority for our cabinet overall, from our perspective here, is to build support throughout the [August] recess process for the legislative agenda," she told the L.A. Times' Eli Stokols and Noah Bierman, who have a great writeup about the White House's continued focus on domestic priorities over all else.
"Every morning this week at 8:45, a newly established 'war room' has convened at the White House, with about 20 staffers logging onto a Zoom call to coordinate messaging and deployment of critical resources," they report. "The operation has nothing to do with the crisis in Afghanistan it's about keeping President Biden's big infrastructure push on track," and the war room is overseen by Tanden.