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Afghan fight against Taliban 'a matter of will', says Mike Pompeo

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said he believes Afghan forces can secure country as US withdraws, but success will depend on whether they have will to put up a fierce fight against Taliban

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, arrives at the airport in New Delhi

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo

AP Des Moines (Iowa)

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said that he believes Afghan forces can secure the country as the US withdraws, but success will depend on whether they have the will to put up a fierce fight against the Taliban.

Thousands of Afghans have fled the country in recent days as Taliban forces have surged through northern Afghanistan.

Pompeo said on Friday that he is confident Afghan forces can repel the Taliban, but it's a matter of will.

I saw on TV the other day, I saw some 22, 23-year-old Afghan males say, 'It's really dangerous here, I want to get out,'" the former secretary of state said.

 

What those Afghans should have been saying is it's really dangerous here, give me an M16, he added.

Under former President Donald Trump, Pompeo oversaw US negotiations with the Taliban and remains the only secretary of state to have met face-to-face with senior Taliban officials.

He applauded President Joe Biden's move to withdraw from Afghanistan rare praise from a Trump loyalist but said he was worried that US counterterrorism operations could be hurt in the process.

Pompeo was in Des Moines, Iowa on Friday speaking at several political events, including a conference for conservative Christians.

Since leaving the office at the end of former President Donald Trump's term, Pompeo has formed a political action committee and is considered a potential 2024 presidential candidate.

He said he is currently focused on fundraising and recruiting for other candidates.

Pompeo pushed Biden to increase pressure on the Cuban government as anti-government protests erupted there.

Pompeo re-designated Cuba a state sponsor of terror during the Trump administration's final days, even as Biden was promising a new approach to the communist-governed island.

The protests have been spurred by food shortages, rising prices and power cuts, but Pompeo stuck to a hardline, America first view of foreign policy.

He warned that any moves to send funds to Cuba would show a fundamental misunderstanding of totalitarian regimes.

You can't fund them, you can't underwrite them, he said.

He suggested instead the US could make moves like opening internet access that would help protesters coordinate and increase pressure on the Cuban government.

There are lots of tools that the American government has in its possession and it demands leadership that wants to destroy communist regimes.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Jul 17 2021 | 7:34 AM IST

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