McCaul subpoenas State Department for Kabul dissent cable
House Foreign Affairs CommitteeChairman Michael McCaul (R-TX) made good on his repeated threats and signed a subpoena for the State Department to furnish the Kabul dissent cable, his office announced Monday.
Several lawsuit warnings from McCaul to Secretary of State Antony Blinken demanded a wire from the U.S. Embassy in Kabul dated July 13, 2021, denouncing the arrangements for the withdrawal from Afghanistan, which quickly turned into conflict. Blinken had been given until the end of Monday’s business hours to agree.
MCCAUL THREATENS TO SUBPOENA STATE DEPARTMENT OVER KABUL DISSENT CABLE FOR” BULLS ***” EXCUSES
” We have made a number of sincere attempts to find common ground so that we can see this important piece of information. I’m forced to submit my second summons as president of this committee as a result of Secretary Blinken’s refusal to provide the Dissent Cable and his reaction to it, according to McCaul.
According to the Wall Street Journal, the wire warned that the Biden presidency was not sufficiently ready to withdraw troops from the war-torn country. In addition to the Taliban takeover, the Foreign Affairs Committee has been looking into the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan that resulted in the deaths of 13 American service users and numerous Afghan citizens.
” The British consumers demand explanations for the circumstances surrounding this horror and the causes of the deaths of 13 U.S. service members.” McCaul continued,” We expect the State Department to uphold the law and abide by this summons in great faith.
Rep. Gregory Meeks( D-NY ), who is currently the panel’s ranking member, requested the cable in August 2021, and McCaul revised his request in January of this year. In September 2021, Blinken disclosed that the connector” lay out”” real problems” about the Afghan government.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Salman Ahmed, the chairman of policy planning for the State Department, raised concerns about the Taliban’s ability to retake power and urged the agency to step up its preparations for evacuation and special immigrant visa applications in order to protect Afghans who supported the US.
Blinken was pressed by McCaul during a controversial hearing last month. Blinken made reference to the precedent set by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger’s unwillingness to deliver a protest wires to Congress.
In a reading next year, Blinken stated that” We are working to provide all the information that this council is looking for.” The division has a long-standing tradition of having opposition cables, which is cherished.
McCaul cited previous Ambassador Tom Boyatt, who sent the wire Kissinger declined to go over, to refute the agency’s claims about a precedence during that reading. Boyatt claimed that his wires ought to have been made public.
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According to a news release, McCaul offered to” evaluate the information in lens” and to permit the” State Department to redact the details of the signers” in an effort to satisfy Blinken. The division, however, remained immobile.
On Tuesday, Blinken is anticipated to receive the summons. This year, the Foreign Affairs Committee will also have a hearing on Ukraine’s aid.
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