The lengthy wait took place as desperate Afghans swarmed Kabul's international airport in the hope of catching evacuation flights out.
The White House had no immediate comment on the report, but on Tuesday afternoon, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters that the president had "not yet spoken with any other world leaders" about the Afghanistan catastrophe.
"Myself, Secretary [of State Antony] Blinken, several other senior members of the team have been engaged on a regular basis with foreign counterparts, and we intend to do so in the coming days."Once Johnson got Biden on the phone, the Telegraph reported, the British PM urged the American president not to throw away "gains made in Afghanistan," an apparent response to Biden's insistence in remarks from the White House Monday that the US "mission in Afghanistan was never supposed to have been nation-building."















Comment: The amount of blowback pre-slamming the audit and its yet-to-be announced results, is revealing. How often do 'potential findings' solicit a 'prebuttal'? See also: