Jonathan WeismanVerified account @jonathanweisman 15 Aug 2021
Biden has few, if any, defenders on the chaotic last days of the 20-year war in Afghanistan, but ultimately, a war-weary nation may well give him a pass for ending America's longest war, regardless of the short-term costs in blood and treasure.
16 Aug 2021 01:27:28 UTC
Jonathan WeismanVerified account @jonathanweisman
Congressional correspondent, The New York Times, author, (((Semitism))) - Being Jewish in the Age of Trump, and No. 4 Imperial Lane
Washington, DC jonathanweisman. com Joined February 2009
https://archive.ph/g3Jqe https:// www. nytimes. com/2021/08/15/us/politics/afghanistan-collapse-politics. html
In Washington, Recriminations Over Afghanistan Emerge Quickly
President Biden is finding few outspoken defenders amid the chaotic collapse of the Afghan government. But after 20 years, a war-weary America may still give the president a pass.
The white Taliban flag flying above a Coca-Cola advertisement at a roundabout in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sunday. Credit... Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
By Jonathan Weisman Aug. 15, 2021, 5:59 p.m. ET
Enjoy the new narrative.
If this is war weariness I’d hate to see what happens when an actual war occurs.
Why not the Khumer Rouge.
I'm sure there's lots of counterrevolutionaries and capitalist saboteurs that magically caused Kabul to fall.
Maybe it's the ghost of Donald Trump.