Biden administration trying to hide info on Afghan fiasco
Secretary of State Antony Blinken could be served a subpoena on Monday if he doesn’t turn over classified documents about the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, the chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee said.
"It's extraordinary to have 23 embassy employees dissenting to the policy of the secretary of State and the White House," Rep. Michael McCaul, a Texas Republican, told "Fox News Sunday" host Shannon Bream.
"We want to know – and the American people deserve to know, and the veterans and the Gold Star mothers deserve to know – what were in those dissenting cables."
Last week during a hearing on the State Department budget, McCaul gave Blinken a Monday deadline to provide the committee a dissent cable authored by at least 23 diplomats stationed the U.S. embassy Kabul in July 2021. The cable warned about how security in Afghanistan was deteriorating before the U.S. withdrawal at the end of August 2021.
The document was sent through a "dissent channel," which allows State Department officials to send warnings to senior officials.
"We need this dissent cable, and I think the American people deserve to see it, to know what in the world was going on in those critical weeks," McCaul told Blinken last week during the hearing. "I have the subpoena. It’s right here, and I’m prepared to serve this."
NO MENTION OF AFGHANISTAN IN BIDEN’S STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS AS AFGHAN EVACUEES LEFT IN LIMBO
McCaul told Bream on Sunday that he is sticking with his plan to serve the subpoena if he does not receive such documents.
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When there is a fiasco as bad as the one in Afghanistan in response to Biden's retreat order, it is important to know whether he ignored advice about the bug-out order.
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