By Agence France-Presse
Top US defense officials denied on Friday that the military had for years hidden from the public its lack of progress in the Afghan war.
US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper (L) and Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark Milley (R) rejected the idea that the Pentagon for years hid from the public its lack of progress in the Afghanistan conflict (AFP Photo/Drew Angerer / MANILA BULLETIN)
Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark Milley rejected allegations that the Pentagon and other government agencies had falsely reported progress while internally officials were deeply skeptical about the war.
"This has been very transparent. It's not like this war was hiding somewhere," Esper told reporters.
"Between all the folks looking at this conflict over the years, some type of insinuation that there's been this large-scale conspiracy is just, to me, ridiculous," he said.
Added Milley: "I know there's an assertion out there, of some sort of coordinated lie over the course of 18 years... I find that a mischaracterization."
"I know that I and many, many others gave assessments at the time based on facts that we knew at the time," he said.
"And those were honest assessments and they were never intended to deceive either the Congress or the American people."
Last week The Washington Post began publishing what it called "The Afghanistan Papers," a trove of internal government documents documenting the failure to defeat the Islamist Taliban group and to strengthen the Afghan government.
The Post said the documents "contradict a long chorus of public statements from US presidents, military commanders, and diplomats who assured Americans year after year that they were making progress in Afghanistan and the war was worth fighting."
US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper (L) and Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark Milley (R) rejected the idea that the Pentagon for years hid from the public its lack of progress in the Afghanistan conflict (AFP Photo/Drew Angerer / MANILA BULLETIN)
Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark Milley rejected allegations that the Pentagon and other government agencies had falsely reported progress while internally officials were deeply skeptical about the war.
"This has been very transparent. It's not like this war was hiding somewhere," Esper told reporters.
"Between all the folks looking at this conflict over the years, some type of insinuation that there's been this large-scale conspiracy is just, to me, ridiculous," he said.
Added Milley: "I know there's an assertion out there, of some sort of coordinated lie over the course of 18 years... I find that a mischaracterization."
"I know that I and many, many others gave assessments at the time based on facts that we knew at the time," he said.
"And those were honest assessments and they were never intended to deceive either the Congress or the American people."
Last week The Washington Post began publishing what it called "The Afghanistan Papers," a trove of internal government documents documenting the failure to defeat the Islamist Taliban group and to strengthen the Afghan government.
The Post said the documents "contradict a long chorus of public statements from US presidents, military commanders, and diplomats who assured Americans year after year that they were making progress in Afghanistan and the war was worth fighting."