用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Conservative MP predicts ‘major hit on West like 9/11’ after fall of Afghanistan to Taliban | The Independent
2021-08-16 00:00:00.0     独立报-英国政治     原网页

       

       A leading Conservative MP has predicted a “major” terrorist attack on the West following the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban.

       Tobias Ellwood, the chairman of the defence select committee, said the UK and its allies would come to “regret” the consequences of pulling troops out of the country.

       The influential MP claimed Afghanistan would become a “haven” for terrorists once again – warning that radical Islamist groups would be keen to demonstrate the futility of two decades of Western intervention.

       “We’re not just gifting this country to the very adversary [there] when we entered Afghanistan to defeat in the first place, but we’re actually seeing terrorist organisations now regroup and return back to their havens,” Mr Ellwood told Sky News on Monday.

       The MP added: “Really sadly, I predict another major hit on the West, the likes of 9/11. Because the terrorist groups will want to bookend our time in Afghanistan to show how futile the last two decades have been.”

       Recommended The Afghan people need our help – many are at risk from the Taliban Taliban take control of another provincial capital The Taliban are storming prisons holding thousands of militants

       The Taliban had harboured Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda in the years before they carried out the September 11 2001 attacks. That sparked a US-led invasion that rapidly scattered al-Qaeda and drove the Taliban from power.

       John Bolton, former national security adviser to Donald Trump, also said the withdrawal of Western troops was a “big mistake” that increased the risk of future terrorist attacks.

       “From the perspective of the US and its allies, this puts us back in the pre-September 11 2001 environment,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

       “It seems almost inevitable that when Taliban does take final control it will allow Isis, al Qaida and other terrorist groups we haven’t even heard of yet to again find sanctuary in Afghanistan.”

       Mr Bolton added: “We run the further risk of those terrorist groups plotting attacks on the US and our partners, and it’s just intolerable that we’ve allowed this to happen.”

       Former Cabinet secretary and former national security adviser Lord Sedwill said it was a “humiliating moment for the West” and warned that “extremists everywhere will be emboldened”.

       Mr Ellwood said the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban was the “biggest foreign policy failure in a generation,” adding that UK foreign policy had been “missing in action”.

       It comes as a fellow Conservative backbencher called for Boris Johnson to apologise to the families of people who died in Afghanistan.

       John Baron, MP for Basildon and Billericay, has joined other politicians in criticising the UK government as remaining UK nationals and their local allies try to flee the country following the collapse of Western-backed authorities.

       “On behalf of previous governments, the prime minister should apologise to the bereaved families of service personnel, and to those personnel who are still paying the price for this folly.”

       Families of soldiers who died on previous tours of Afghanistan have criticised both the British and US governments’ handling of the withdrawal from the nation.

       Graham Knight, father of 25-year-old RAF Sergeant Ben Knight who was killed when his Nimrod aircraft exploded in Afghanistan in 2006, said the British government should have moved more quickly in recent days.

       Mr Knight said: “I think it was all started too late again. It [the evacuation] should have started about a week ago … I feel very sorry for them, they’re obviously fighting for their lives. Anybody who feels like that is in a desperate situation. It’s like Saigon all over again.”

       Defence secretary Ben Wallace became overwhelmed with emotion over the crisis on Monday morning – admitting on LBC radio that “some people won’t get back” from Afghanistan as a desperate struggle to get UK nationals and local allies out of the country continues.

       MPs will be called back from their summer break to parliament to discuss the worsening crisis and the government’s response for one day this Wednesday.

       


标签:政治
关键词: al-Qaeda     Ellwood     Taliban     terrorist attack     Afghanistan     Knight     allies    
滚动新闻