Secretary of State Antony Blinken will testify before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.
The nation's top diplomat is set to appear before the committee Tuesday, after the U.S. military mission on the ground in Afghanistan was ended but fell short of evacuating all American citizens and Afghan allies from the country.
Committee chair Sen. Robert Menendez had vowed to hold hearings on the Biden administration's controversial withdrawal from Afghanistan, which the New Jersey Democrat called a "flawed plan."
"In implementing this flawed plan, I am disappointed that the Biden administration clearly did not accurately assess the implications of rapid U.S. withdrawal," Menendez said in a statement last week. "We are now witnessing the horrifying results of many years of policy and intelligence failures."
Menendez also took aim at the Trump administration, particularly the previous administration's negotiations with the Taliban.
"The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will continue fulfilling its oversight role with a hearing on U.S. policy towards Afghanistan, including the Trump administration's flawed negotiations with Taliban, and the Biden administration's flawed execution of the U.S. withdrawal," Menendez said.
The testimony will also come as the State Department has faced accusations of delaying chartered evacuation flights out of Afghanistan, potentially endangering the lives of U.S. citizens, Afghans who helped Americans, and green card holders who were left behind in the country.
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"This is zero place to be negotiating with American lives. Those are our people standing on the tarmac and all it takes is a f---ing phone call," said one individual who has been involved in the private evacuation effort.
"If one life is lost as a result of this, the blood is on the White House's hands. The blood is on their hands," that individual said, adding: "It is not the Taliban that is holding this up – as much as it sickens me to say that – it is the United States government."