
© MOD CROWN COPYRIGHT VIA GETTY IMAGESBritish armed forces work with the U.S. military to evacuate eligible civilians and their families out of Afghanistan on August 21, 2021, in Kabul. President Joe Biden announced in 2021 that U.S. troops would exit the country, saying, "It's time to end America's longest war."
A former Army soldier is blaming the Biden administration after he says he was ordered to pay for gear he brought home from his last deployed mission in Afghanistan.
President
Joe Biden has
made "no apologies" for the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan following two decades of American involvement there. A few months after he was sworn in, Biden announced that U.S. troops would exit the country by September 11, 2021, saying, "It's time to end America's longest war."
His administration met a self-imposed August 31, 2021, deadline with evacuations of between 13,000 and 18,000 people per day. The withdrawal, described by some as a
scramble and mad dash to meet the deadline, led to 13 U.S. service members being killed — the first service members killed in action since February 2020 — and at least 18 others were injured during an attack at a checkpoint outside Kabul's airport.
In addition, 170 Afghans were killed. In total,
more than 120,000 people were eventually evacuated before September 2021.
On Monday, the former U.S. soldier wrote on
TikTok that it was his gear turn-in day following approximately four years of active duty in the Army's 82nd Airborne Division.
The experience of leaving the service, he said, made him want to "holler, scream, yell."
Comment: The report on Pavlovski's pledge Tim Pool of Timcast comments: