Kabul's professor angry with President Beden: People's knees trembled

A lecture at the American University in Kabul's Afghan capital criticised US President Joe Biden for his comments on the situation in Afghanistan and the process undertaken by the US to withdraw troops from the nation. On Monday, Biden said he stood “completely behind” his decision to withdraw the American war force while acknowledging [...]
A lecture at the American University in Kabul's Afghan capital criticised US President Joe Biden for his comments on the situation in Afghanistan and the process undertaken by the US to withdraw troops from the nation.
On Monday, Beden said he stood “completely behind” his decision to withdraw the American war forces, while acknowledging that the Afghan collapse took place much faster than his administration's most pessimistic public predictions.
Despite declaring “the money stops with me”, Beden charged almost all Afghans with the shocking rapid invasion of the Taliban.
Speaking to British broadcaster Sky News from Kabul, Professor Obaidullah Baheer asked the way the troops were withdrawn, Klankosova broadcasts.tv.
“No one questioned the necessity of withdrawal,” he said. “was the way it developed and that's something he's ignoring. ”
He said the US and the international community had left Afghanistan only to hold negotiations with the Taliban.
Instead of abandoning Afghans and letting ordinary people negotiate with Taliban, why didn't the government, why did the American or international community not take that responsibility and try to reconcile the vision of the next world?” He said.
I don't think Afghan people who stayed close to the project for 20 years deserve this”, reports the AP, broadcast Klankosova.tv.
Baheer added that the <x0.25s of people trembled” as they were concerned about what the future will now have for Afghanistan.
The Taliban announced a <x0mnist” throughout Afghanistan on Tuesday and called on women to join their government, as they sought to convince a cautious population that they had changed.












