A few weeks ago, the night before he was to meet with President Joe Biden, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani broke bread with a group of friendly diplomats, military officers, scholars and journalists. The dinner was off-the-record, so I can’t tell you what Ghani or others said. With one exception.

I hadn’t planned to speak, but there was a point I thought needed to be made and no one else was making it.

If President Ghani took my advice, it had no impact. American forces are withdrawing from Afghanistan in time for the 20th anniversary of the most lethal terrorist attacks ever on American soil, attacks that Al Qaeda planned, honored guests of the Taliban—then and now.

We are arguing against repeating President Barack Obama’s 2011 mistake in Iraq, when he ignored his national security cabinet’s advice that a small residual force remain in-country. He ordered all U.S. forces to depart.

From the ashes of Al Qaeda in Iraq, Islamic State (ISIS) soon arose. Shi’ite militias loyal to the Islamic Republic of Iran were emboldened. Three years later, Obama sent U.S. forces back to Iraq.

Perhaps understanding this, Biden now appears to have chosen the least bad option for Iraq. He’s announced that the U.S. combat mission in that country will conclude by the end of 2021 but that a small residual force will remain to train, advise and assist Iraqi forces that have been suppressing ISIS. The U.S. presence also can help prevent Tehran from using military proxies to control Iraq as it has been doing in Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Gaza.

Yet Biden fails to see that the least bad option for Iraq is the least bad option for Afghanistan as well: a small residual force of elite troops to continue training, advising, assisting, providing intelligence and close air support to the Afghan forces that have been successfully suppressing the Taliban and Al Qaeda. (Reports of AQ’s demise are, at best, premature.)

Let’s do the math. At the height of the conflict in Afghanistan, around 2010, there were roughly 100,000 American troops in Afghanistan. By the time Donald Trump entered the White House in 2017, we had only 10,000 troops there. By February of this year, the number was fewer than 3,500.

To understand how modest that commitment is, consider that the U.S. has maintained about 78,000 troops in Japan and South Korea for decades. We have many thousands of troops stationed at dozens of other overseas bases—and national security, more than altruism, is the explanation. (About 25,000 troops were deployed to Washington, D.C., following the Jan. 6 riot.)

Because America is withdrawing from Afghanistan, America’s allies also are withdrawing—about 8,000 troops—as are 6,000 contractors responsible for such essential tasks as keeping the Afghan military’s aircraft flying.

America’s investment of blood and treasure in Afghanistan has not been without achievements. Among them:

1. Al-Qaeda has been prevented from mounting another attack against the U.S. homeland.

2. The Taliban had been confined to rural areas, just as ISIS has been in Iraq (though, not surprisingly, over the last few days, the Taliban have seized a half dozen provincial capitals).

3. In Kabul, a new generation of Afghans have come of age. They are educated and pro-American. Women are prominent among them.

Were Biden to replicate his 2021 Iraq model, the Taliban would not be able to boast that they’ve defeated the mighty United States—as Khaled Sheikh Mohammad, the planner of the 9/11 attacks, confidently predicted. “We will win,” he told his interrogator at Gitmo. “We only need to fight long enough for you to defeat yourself by quitting.”

Over the years ahead, a U.S. base in Afghanistan would be of enormous strategic benefit. Within the Indo-Pacific region, more than 20 designated jihadi/terrorist organizations (not counting Al Qaeda) need to be kept in check. The notion that we can accomplish this mission with satellites and forces based “over the horizon” is fanciful.

And in case you hadn’t noticed: The People’s Republic of China, America’s top national security concern, is in the Indo-Pacific. Where else between the Gulf and Asia could we have an airbase on a par with the one we built at Bagram? Throwing away such an asset is senseless.

Final point: If the Taliban murder thousands of Afghan men and women for the “crime” of having allied with America, will that not leave an indelible stain on our nation? It surely will be deleterious to future efforts to develop partners to fight alongside us against common enemies.

Please don’t tell me the “international community” will stand up to the Taliban. You’re not that naïve. Meanwhile, America-haters in Beijing, Moscow, Tehran, Havana and Pyongyang will be heartened. Jihadists around the world will rejoice. And recruit.

Clifford D. May is founder and president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), and a columnist for The Washington Times.

This article was first published by The Washington Times.

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