Ashraf Ghani pledged to fight till death but fled when the time came: Blinken

In a recent CBS News interview, Blinken was asked if he had personally tried to persuade Ghani to stay in Kabul. The Secretary of State said he was on the phone with Ghani on Saturday (August 14) night, pressing him to accept a plan for transferring power to a new government in Kabul. This government would have been "led by the Taliban but (would have) included all aspects of the Afghan society", he said.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani promised to fight till death but fled Kabul when the Taliban came and captured the capital city, Dawn reported.

In a recent CBS News interview, Blinken was asked if he had personally tried to persuade Ghani to stay in Kabul.

Advertisement

The Secretary of State said he was on the phone with Ghani on Saturday (August 14) night, pressing him to accept a plan for transferring power to a new government in Kabul.

This government would have been "led by the Taliban but (would have) included all aspects of the Afghan society", he said.

Advertisement

Also Read | Need for structural changes in economy and future of energy: Rosneft CEO

Ghani told him that "he was prepared to do that, but if the Taliban wouldn't go along, he was ready to fight to the death", Blinken said. "And the very next day, he fled Afghanistan."

Advertisement

The Taliban captured Kabul on August 15 as Ghani flew out of Afghanistan.

"So, I was engaged with President Ghani over many weeks, many months," Blinken added.

Advertisement

Asked if he did everything he could, the top US diplomat said the State Department was reviewing everything that Washington did, starting from 2020 when former President Donald Trump's administration made an agreement with the Taliban for withdrawing American troops from Afghanistan.

Also Read | India Sweden Innovation Day 2021: Concrete roadmap to create circular economy

Advertisement

The review would include "the actions we took during our administration, because we have to learn every possible lesson from the last couple of years" and also from the last 20 years, he said.

Advertisement