1 00:00:00,600 --> 00:00:10,520 Speaker 1: The Armstrong and Jetty Show. Well, we've been saying all 2 00:00:10,640 --> 00:00:13,080 Speaker 1: day long that the wrong story is going to get 3 00:00:13,119 --> 00:00:17,680 Speaker 1: most of the headlines. That is impeachment and or the 4 00:00:18,680 --> 00:00:22,000 Speaker 1: Inspector General report coming out. The biggest story in America 5 00:00:22,040 --> 00:00:24,239 Speaker 1: should be the Afghanistan papers that are out in the 6 00:00:24,280 --> 00:00:29,600 Speaker 1: Washington Post. US officials misled public about Afghan war. Confidential 7 00:00:29,640 --> 00:00:33,960 Speaker 1: documents reveal for eighteen years we were misled or lied to, uh, 8 00:00:34,120 --> 00:00:36,640 Speaker 1: which I'm not surprised by, but I'm still very angry about. 9 00:00:37,000 --> 00:00:40,080 Speaker 1: Craig Whitlock is an investigative reporter for the Washington Post, 10 00:00:40,280 --> 00:00:43,239 Speaker 1: and we are very grateful that Craig carved us out 11 00:00:43,240 --> 00:00:45,400 Speaker 1: a couple of minutes today on the day of the 12 00:00:45,479 --> 00:00:48,000 Speaker 1: release of this blockbuster story. Craig, how are you, sir? 13 00:00:49,000 --> 00:00:53,120 Speaker 1: Very good? Thanks for having me. What's our pleasure? I'm 14 00:00:53,159 --> 00:00:56,880 Speaker 1: I'm so mad reading through this um we we had 15 00:00:56,920 --> 00:00:59,040 Speaker 1: been saying on the air for years, what are we 16 00:00:59,080 --> 00:01:01,600 Speaker 1: trying to ACCOMPLI It doesn't look to me like we 17 00:01:01,680 --> 00:01:03,680 Speaker 1: have a goal. It seems to me like if we 18 00:01:03,760 --> 00:01:05,400 Speaker 1: left today would be the same result as if we 19 00:01:05,520 --> 00:01:07,280 Speaker 1: left five years from a how or five years ago. 20 00:01:07,360 --> 00:01:09,120 Speaker 1: It turns out behind the scenes, they were saying the 21 00:01:09,160 --> 00:01:12,480 Speaker 1: same sorts of things, right, that's right. I mean those 22 00:01:12,520 --> 00:01:15,880 Speaker 1: are pretty basic questions, and you think people in position 23 00:01:15,920 --> 00:01:18,160 Speaker 1: of power would have been asking them, and it turns 24 00:01:18,160 --> 00:01:20,040 Speaker 1: out they were, and they didn't have very good answers. 25 00:01:20,080 --> 00:01:22,279 Speaker 1: And this has been going on for many, many years. 26 00:01:22,280 --> 00:01:25,720 Speaker 1: They didn't know why we were there, how it would end, 27 00:01:25,800 --> 00:01:27,800 Speaker 1: or how would we would get out. How did you 28 00:01:27,840 --> 00:01:32,199 Speaker 1: get this information? So this started over three years ago. 29 00:01:32,319 --> 00:01:34,800 Speaker 1: I'm I'm a slow reporter, I guess, but we we 30 00:01:34,959 --> 00:01:38,960 Speaker 1: filed freedom information at requests with an obscure government agency 31 00:01:39,160 --> 00:01:43,400 Speaker 1: called the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan. We'd heard they 32 00:01:43,400 --> 00:01:47,560 Speaker 1: had done an interview with Michael Flynn, the retired army general. 33 00:01:47,880 --> 00:01:50,720 Speaker 1: This was back in ten and Flynn was in the news, 34 00:01:50,800 --> 00:01:54,240 Speaker 1: of course for a support of Trump during the presidential campaign. 35 00:01:54,240 --> 00:01:57,600 Speaker 1: But we had heard Flynn had given this long, very 36 00:01:57,600 --> 00:02:01,000 Speaker 1: blunt interview about Afghanistan and the were there. So we've 37 00:02:01,280 --> 00:02:04,840 Speaker 1: put in a public records request and uh, we thought 38 00:02:04,840 --> 00:02:06,000 Speaker 1: we were going to get it, and we had to 39 00:02:06,040 --> 00:02:09,440 Speaker 1: file a lawsuit and this agency really dragged its feet 40 00:02:09,440 --> 00:02:11,880 Speaker 1: for three years. It turned out that in addition to 41 00:02:11,919 --> 00:02:15,080 Speaker 1: the Flynn interview, there were hundreds more, and so we 42 00:02:15,160 --> 00:02:18,520 Speaker 1: had to sue and file more freem Information Act requests 43 00:02:18,520 --> 00:02:20,640 Speaker 1: for those two and it just it took a long 44 00:02:20,680 --> 00:02:22,440 Speaker 1: time to pry them lose out of the government. They 45 00:02:22,440 --> 00:02:25,160 Speaker 1: didn't want to cough them up. Well, it's encouraging in 46 00:02:25,160 --> 00:02:27,799 Speaker 1: a way, Craig, that those documents exist at all. There 47 00:02:27,840 --> 00:02:33,320 Speaker 1: seemed to have been a serious effort to understand what 48 00:02:33,400 --> 00:02:36,440 Speaker 1: our strategies are, how they're working, and whether they're likely 49 00:02:36,440 --> 00:02:39,880 Speaker 1: to bear fruit. It's just that once many of those answers, 50 00:02:40,000 --> 00:02:44,520 Speaker 1: or preliminary answers were learned, they were buried, which is frightening. Well, 51 00:02:44,880 --> 00:02:47,320 Speaker 1: that's right. And the context of this, this was a 52 00:02:47,400 --> 00:02:51,000 Speaker 1: special project that this Inspector General f Afghanistan had started. 53 00:02:52,560 --> 00:02:55,840 Speaker 1: And the timing is important because everybody thought the war 54 00:02:56,000 --> 00:02:58,960 Speaker 1: was coming to an end, right Obama had said I'm 55 00:02:58,960 --> 00:03:01,160 Speaker 1: gonna pull all you troops out by the end of 56 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:05,240 Speaker 1: my presidency. Uh, and that's where people thought things were going. 57 00:03:05,320 --> 00:03:07,560 Speaker 1: We were drawing down the number of troops there. So 58 00:03:07,639 --> 00:03:10,320 Speaker 1: they thought they'd do this project and interview hundreds of 59 00:03:10,360 --> 00:03:13,600 Speaker 1: people to see what went wrong in Afghanistan, so that 60 00:03:13,919 --> 00:03:15,760 Speaker 1: you know, in the future, if we ever got stuck 61 00:03:15,800 --> 00:03:18,720 Speaker 1: in another war, we wouldn't repeat the mistakes. But of 62 00:03:18,760 --> 00:03:21,480 Speaker 1: course it turned out we we didn't leave Afghanistan, and 63 00:03:21,639 --> 00:03:25,079 Speaker 1: Obama left several thousand troops there and Trump sent several 64 00:03:25,120 --> 00:03:28,040 Speaker 1: thousand more and the war is still going on. So 65 00:03:28,120 --> 00:03:30,839 Speaker 1: these were these were lessons that were not learned, and 66 00:03:31,480 --> 00:03:34,480 Speaker 1: subsequently the government was trying very hard to to keep 67 00:03:34,520 --> 00:03:38,000 Speaker 1: them suppressed. As you pointed out, do you get any 68 00:03:38,160 --> 00:03:42,360 Speaker 1: sense that there was um much difference in the attitudes 69 00:03:42,680 --> 00:03:46,120 Speaker 1: behind the scenes in the Obama administration versus the Bush administration, 70 00:03:46,200 --> 00:03:50,320 Speaker 1: or did it just once you got at the level 71 00:03:50,360 --> 00:03:53,360 Speaker 1: of the military kind of be the same direction of 72 00:03:53,760 --> 00:03:59,119 Speaker 1: let's just keep stumbling along doing our best. I think 73 00:03:59,280 --> 00:04:03,080 Speaker 1: both of them were trying to to operate the war 74 00:04:03,160 --> 00:04:05,680 Speaker 1: as best they knew. But what was striking is behind 75 00:04:05,720 --> 00:04:08,400 Speaker 1: the scenes, both of them are equally guilty of not 76 00:04:08,480 --> 00:04:12,160 Speaker 1: being forthcoming with the American people about how things were going. 77 00:04:12,240 --> 00:04:15,280 Speaker 1: I mean, we went back and we separately we got 78 00:04:15,320 --> 00:04:19,000 Speaker 1: these memos that Rumsfeld had written, thousands of them from 79 00:04:19,040 --> 00:04:21,560 Speaker 1: an outfit called the National Security Archive, which is a 80 00:04:21,600 --> 00:04:24,760 Speaker 1: nonprofit group that had sued the Pentagon to get these memos. 81 00:04:24,800 --> 00:04:27,720 Speaker 1: Rumsfeld had written, there's one back in April of two 82 00:04:27,760 --> 00:04:31,360 Speaker 1: thousand two, so six months after the war started, he 83 00:04:31,400 --> 00:04:34,240 Speaker 1: writes a memo to several generals and he says, I 84 00:04:34,320 --> 00:04:37,599 Speaker 1: may be impatient, in fact I know him a bit impatient, 85 00:04:38,080 --> 00:04:39,760 Speaker 1: but we are never going to get the U. S. 86 00:04:39,839 --> 00:04:43,159 Speaker 1: Military out of Afghanistan unless we take care to see 87 00:04:43,200 --> 00:04:46,200 Speaker 1: that there is something going on that will provide the 88 00:04:46,240 --> 00:04:49,880 Speaker 1: stability that will be necessary for us to leave. Then 89 00:04:49,920 --> 00:04:54,360 Speaker 1: he ended it with one word, he said, help exclamation point. Again, 90 00:04:54,400 --> 00:04:58,159 Speaker 1: this is back in two thousand two, well saying we're 91 00:04:58,240 --> 00:05:02,040 Speaker 1: never going to get the troops out. Uh. And and 92 00:05:02,080 --> 00:05:04,640 Speaker 1: that's a guy, you know, nobody was told this back then, 93 00:05:04,680 --> 00:05:06,919 Speaker 1: and he was a Vietnam era guy, so he he 94 00:05:07,000 --> 00:05:11,080 Speaker 1: understood how that momentum happened, that inertia, right. Craig Whitlock 95 00:05:11,200 --> 00:05:13,919 Speaker 1: is on the line of the Washington Post. Craig, it's 96 00:05:13,920 --> 00:05:18,400 Speaker 1: it's disturbing if the generals or the politicians say, uh, 97 00:05:18,440 --> 00:05:20,800 Speaker 1: you know, we have x number of this and we 98 00:05:20,839 --> 00:05:24,960 Speaker 1: have pacified this amount of score mileage and therefore it's 99 00:05:25,000 --> 00:05:27,800 Speaker 1: clear we are making progress. I mean, if if if 100 00:05:27,800 --> 00:05:31,520 Speaker 1: their example is not good evidence, that's disturbing. But if 101 00:05:31,560 --> 00:05:36,159 Speaker 1: the evidence itself was faked, up. That's just extra galling in. 102 00:05:36,240 --> 00:05:39,400 Speaker 1: According to your article, down to the lowest level, a 103 00:05:39,400 --> 00:05:43,040 Speaker 1: lot of the statistics were being faked up, that's right, 104 00:05:43,160 --> 00:05:46,039 Speaker 1: and you know, to be honest, I wasn't shocked by that. 105 00:05:46,200 --> 00:05:49,000 Speaker 1: I covered the Pentagon in the West Military for several 106 00:05:49,080 --> 00:05:52,240 Speaker 1: years ro the post, particularly during the Obama administration. For 107 00:05:52,400 --> 00:05:54,479 Speaker 1: that it was a foreign correspondent, and we would get 108 00:05:54,760 --> 00:05:57,719 Speaker 1: told all the time by commanders, uh, you know, that 109 00:05:57,760 --> 00:06:00,920 Speaker 1: they were making progress, and they would couch by saying that, 110 00:06:01,120 --> 00:06:02,840 Speaker 1: you know, it's a tough fight and there's going to 111 00:06:02,920 --> 00:06:05,960 Speaker 1: be setbacks. But they would throw out these statistics all 112 00:06:06,000 --> 00:06:08,360 Speaker 1: the time, and they always they always seem cherry picked, 113 00:06:08,400 --> 00:06:11,480 Speaker 1: you know, one's you know, meant to show a certain 114 00:06:11,839 --> 00:06:15,839 Speaker 1: certain portrait. But to see people admit in these interviews, 115 00:06:15,880 --> 00:06:19,800 Speaker 1: these confidential interviews, that yeah, we we did doctor them up. 116 00:06:19,839 --> 00:06:22,720 Speaker 1: We distorted the statistics. We only pulled the ones that 117 00:06:22,760 --> 00:06:25,240 Speaker 1: made things look good and we buried the others. And 118 00:06:25,279 --> 00:06:27,440 Speaker 1: we funneled these all the way up to the White 119 00:06:27,480 --> 00:06:29,360 Speaker 1: House like that. You know, it's one thing to see 120 00:06:29,360 --> 00:06:31,719 Speaker 1: it in black and white them admit it. Craig a 121 00:06:31,920 --> 00:06:34,800 Speaker 1: thousand apologies. We are up against a hard break but 122 00:06:34,839 --> 00:06:38,640 Speaker 1: this is some some serious, great journalism. It's stuff the 123 00:06:38,680 --> 00:06:40,760 Speaker 1: American people ought to be reading. And uh and we 124 00:06:40,839 --> 00:06:42,400 Speaker 1: thank you not only for the work you did, but 125 00:06:42,440 --> 00:06:45,200 Speaker 1: your time today. Man, thanks, thank you. Take care of