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The great Afghan cover-up

The great Afghan cover-up

British armed forces work with the U.S. military to evacuate eligible civilians and their families out of the country on August 21, 2021 in Kabul, Afghanistan. Photo by MoD Crown Copyright via Getty Images
On the great Afghan leak and cover up, where to start? The answer – the only decent answer – is with the principal victims, the volunteer soldiers, translators, support staff and their families who helped British forces during the so-called war on terror, and who did so in the hope of forging a better country but who were then betrayed by a butter-fingered official (still employed) and left in great danger.
That their state enemy, the Taliban, did not use the leak of more than 18,714 names – and not just names but telephone numbers, personal details, family members' details – to institute a general slaughter of the up to 100,000 people thought to be affected in total, is fortunate. Although, come to think of it, how would we know if any of our former allies were killed or tortured because of the leak? All this is shrouded still in secrecy, and yet another government injunction. But this week I spoke to one former Afghan interpreter who told me of the recent public murder of the brother of a former pro-British soldier.
Even as we lean on the possibility of an effective and assertive state to bring us greater economic growth and equality, we are left slack-jawed and embarrassed at the continuing incompetence of the actual British state as it exists today. From our military blunders to our shrivelled aid programme, British state failure has often been, as it were, foreigner-facing. In this case, at least the government tried to remedy things by bringing some 24,000 Afghans affected by the data breach to this country, either already or soon. The total cost, over time, could be up to £7 billion.
At which point, however, the British state starts to remember the British voter, and panics. We can well believe that the original ordinary, non-super injunction, was a reasonable short-term precautionary step while the numbers of those in danger were established and swift measures were taken to get them out of harm's way. But what followed was, let's be clear, a cover-up. The true story was hidden from Parliament, journalists and the public, quite deliberately and for years.
Why? Again, some of the hesitation must have been because of worry that release of the facts would put more people in even more danger. Only once the Rimmer inquiry decided that wasn't true did John Healey, the Defence Secretary, act. One of the few politicians left in public life who can command respect across the Commons, he sounded convincing about the difficulty of that decision. But much of this, particularly before the election last year, was about backside-covering.
MPs are well aware that more migration is not popular, and that Afghans, despite all the heroism of some of them, are not a particularly popular group. In the first ten months of last year, foreign nationals were twice as likely to be arrested for crimes, and Afghans were among the top five nationalities for arrest rates. They were also among the most highly represented groups convicted for sexual offences. So the Tory cabinet knew a new scheme for Afghans, coming at great cost, would not be popular in an election year; particularly if it was the result of a government blunder. The new scheme, therefore, became a state secret. This was disgraceful.
Ministers hate ruling things out because they don't know what's going to happen in the future. But the armed forces minister Luke Pollard came close to telling me this week he would never support another super-injunction of this kind. Indeed. Keir Starmer, now on his second career, should resolve to keep away from secret courts.
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And there is a far bigger lesson. Our most recent military adventures have brought only grief. The Falklands War was no model for anything. The Iraq War removed a bloodthirsty dictator but it brought civil war and devastation in its wake, plus waves of migration, and the arrival for a time of Isis, a genuinely Islamo-fascist regime which by the end of 2015 ruled an area in which some 12 million people lived. In all those ways, intervention failed.
The war in Afghanistan also failed. It failed to dislodge the Taliban. What did not kill them made them stronger. It failed the women and girls of Afghanistan dreaming of a decent education. It failed to make the Middle East safer and it humiliated both the United States and Britain at a time when our enemies, not least in Russia, were closely watching. This probably contributed to the subsequent Russian invasion of Ukraine.
So as Labour ministers contemplate this latest inherited state humiliation, can they please resolve to stop foreign wars – unless they are absolutely sure there is no alternative and that it is, existentially, in our national interest? For our modern experience, rammed home this week, is that warfare fails.
[See also: The Tories are responsible for the Afghan resettlement fiasco]
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BBC Breakfast's Charlie Stayt issues apology to viewers after he abruptly ends interview
BBC Breakfast's Charlie Stayt issues apology to viewers after he abruptly ends interview

Daily Mirror

time31 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

BBC Breakfast's Charlie Stayt issues apology to viewers after he abruptly ends interview

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Nicola Sturgeon tells all about famous names in British politics
Nicola Sturgeon tells all about famous names in British politics

STV News

time33 minutes ago

  • STV News

Nicola Sturgeon tells all about famous names in British politics

Nicola Sturgeon has told all about her experiences with some of the most famous names in British politics in her new memoir, Frankly. Sturgeon was Scotland's longest-serving first minister, having spent more than eight years in the role until she stepped down in 2023. She crossed paths with five UK Prime Ministers during her time in office, led the SNP to victory in eight elections, and led the country through the global Covid-19 pandemic. She has been an MSP since the formation of Scottish Parliament in 1999, but in March she announced she would step back from frontline politics at the 2026 election. In her new memoir, Frankly, which was released on Thursday, Sturgeon tells all about the famous people she's interacted with over the years. Here's what she had to say. Sturgeon spoke very highly about the late Queen Elizabeth II, despite calling herself a republican 'at heart and by instinct'. 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'Suddenly there I was under the instruction of 007 himself pacing up and down the library of the new club with a folded piece of paper between my teeth, repeating sentences chosen, it seemed for their particular combination of syllables consonants and vowels,' she wrote. 'My lesson in voice projection from Sir Sean Connery and the laughter we shared in the process is an experience I won't forget,' she wrote. She later recalled answering a call from an unknown number after her first outing at First Minister's Questions. 'I immediately thought I was being pranked by someone doing a Sean Connery impression. I wasn't. It was the man himself, still in Edinburgh, saying that he had just watched me on TV and thought the tone and depth of my voice had been perfect. I took that as a win,' she wrote. The Harry Potter author has repeatedly criticised Sturgeon for the SNP government's controversial gender recognition reforms, and Sturgeon wrote that one of Rowling's stunts 'wounded [her] deeply'. 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She added: 'There are few issues I care more about than protecting and advancing women's rights, so to hear myself described as a destroyer of them wounds me deeply.' Sturgeon said David Cameron was 'by some margin the Prime Minister [she] found easiest to deal with'. The former first minister said he 'always appeared to bear the burdens of office quite lightly', but that her relationship with him was 'cordial and constructive'. 'David Cameron was the first of five prime ministers I interacted with during my time in office,' Sturgeon wrote. 'In terms of background and political outlook, he and I had little in common. 'However, by some margin, he was the prime minister I found easiest to deal with. He had an effortless charm, burnished at Eton no doubt, and despite our differences, I liked him. She added: 'Indeed, given some of the characters who came after, I would later feel quite nostalgic about my interactions with Cameron.' 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She said the phone call, which took place between Trump's election in 2016 and his inauguration in January 2017, was one of two interactions she had with the US President 'The ten minutes or so that followed must rank amongst the most absurd of my entire time in office,' Sturgeon wrote. The US President invited her to the White House and railed against Scotland's 'obsession' with wind power, the former first minister said. Sturgeon described Donald Trump's defeated political rival, Hillary Clinton, as 'someone [she] had looked up to for a long time'. Sturgeon added she was 'sorry' Clinton wasn't elected as the first female US president. 'When the US finally does elect its first female president – which at the time of writing feels further away than ever – she will owe an enormous debt of gratitude to Hillary Clinton. I am just sorry it couldn't have been her,' Sturgeon wrote. Sturgeon's former friend and mentor turned political rival, Alex Salmond, features heavily in her memoir, and there's a whole chapter dedicated to their complex relationship. Sturgeon insisted she was not the one who had leaked the outcome of the Scottish government investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct against Salmond to the press. She claimed Salmond, or someone close to him, may have leaked the details himself. Sturgeon also accused Salmond of attempting to 'cast himself as the victim' and being 'prepared to traumatise, time and again, the women at the centre of it all'. She added that Salmond would rather have seen the SNP 'destroyed' than have it succeed without him. 'I was clearly public enemy number one. For a while, I told myself that the bonds between us would be stronger than his thirst for revenge,' she wrote. 'Eventually, though, I had to face the fact that he was determined to destroy me. 'I was now engaged in mortal political combat with someone I knew to be both ruthless and highly effective. 'It was a difficult reality to reconcile myself to. So too was losing him as a friend. I went through what I can only describe as a grieving process. 'For a time after we stopped speaking, I would have conversations with him in my head about politics and the issues of the day. 'I had occasional, but always vivid, dreams in which we were still on good terms. I would wake up from these feeling utterly bereft.' Sturgeon also claims in her book that Salmond had admitted to her that the 'substance' of one of the sexual harassment complaints had been true. The former Alba Party leader was acquitted of all charges relating to the allegations at court in 2020, while a judicial review found the Scottish Government's own investigation of him was tainted with apparent bias. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

MIKEY SMITH: 11 unhinged Donald Trump moments as he gets absolutely played by Putin at Ukraine summit
MIKEY SMITH: 11 unhinged Donald Trump moments as he gets absolutely played by Putin at Ukraine summit

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

MIKEY SMITH: 11 unhinged Donald Trump moments as he gets absolutely played by Putin at Ukraine summit

The stage was set, there were logos on the backdrop, serving US military officers got on their knees to roll a red carpet all the way to the war criminal's plane. But while Putin got everything he wanted - Trump not so much Donald Trump met with Vladimir Putin in Alaska last night, and the Russian dictator appears to have played him like an extremely cheap fiddle. ‌ The stage was set, there were logos on the backdrop, serving US military officers got on their knees to roll a red carpet all the way to the war criminal's plane - though not quite to the President's ‌ But at the end of it all, there was no ceasefire. ‌ Putin got everything he wanted: Legitimacy, airtime, a chance to shower Trump with flattery while smirking at him, and a chance to discuss things other than Ukraine with a western world leader as if he wasn't an international pariah. And Trump, as far as we can tell, got nothing. The thing about Donald Trump is that for all the bluster, he's much better at setting up a meeting than he is at getting something out of it. He's not so much a master dealmaker as an average hotelier. Heres everything that happened at the Alaska summit that you need to know about. Buckle up. 1. Vlad's red carpet was longer than Trump's In an ominous signal of what was to come, Putin got a lit more red carpet than Trump did. ‌ The pair were supposed to walk to the podium from their respective aircraft down an L-shaped red carpet. But either through a lack of length, or the inept parking of Air Force One, Trump had to walk for quite some time on the air base tarmac before his feet found felt. All the while Putin's limpy feet enjoyed the plush fibres. ‌ 2. The applause, the shrugs, the smirks Trump weirdly applauded the ruthless Russian dictator who has ordered the deaths of countless people, undoubtedly committed war crimes, not to mention using banned nerve agents for assassinations on British soil. Upon reaching the podium, a waiting pool reporter shouted the not unreasonable question: "Are you going to stop killing civilians?" ‌ Putin pointed to his ear and shrugged, either indicating he couldn't hear properly, or didn't understand the language. Putin speaks English. He was asked the same question again at the top of the meeting, but again made a funny facial expression and said nothing. ‌ 3. They drove off There was a big fuss in Trump's first term about him having a short meeting with Putin where only the two leaders and Putin's interpreter - and nobody else on the American side - were there. It was quite a relief when the details of the meeting were switched up to a three-on-three, with envoy Steve Witkoff and Secretary of State Marco Rubio sitting in on Trump's end. ‌ But then Trump ushered Putin into his car, where they were alone for several minutes on the drive to the meeting - so Putin had a chance to get in Trump's ear alone after all. 4. The meeting setup was weird Normally if you're negotiating a peace treaty, everyone sits around a big table, with documents and officials and a big bit of wood to thump if things get heated. The setup in last night's meeting was much more formal. Like the bilateral meetings that happen at a G7 summit or foreign visit. Two leaders either side of a low table with their entourages flanking on each side. ‌ Almost like it was set up for a photo op rather than an actual negotiation. 5. The "press conference" at the end was even weirder After an about 3 hours of meetings, Trump and Putin walked out onto a nearby stage for a weird and stilted press conference. Sort of. ‌ Putin spoke first, which in itself is odd for a visiting world leader. And oddly for Trump, they walked off at the end without taking amy questions. 6. Putin laid it on Trump pretty thick - and thanked him for making him look less like a murderer Putin thanked Trump for the "friendly" tone of the conversation they had on Friday and said Russia and the United States should "turn the page and go back to cooperation." ‌ He praised Trump as someone who "has a clear idea of what he wants to achieve and sincerely cares about the prosperity of his country, and at the same time shows understanding that Russia's has its own national interests." "I expect that today's agreements will become a reference point not only for solving the Ukrainian problem, but will also mark the beginning of the restoration of businesslike, pragmatic relations between Russia and the U.S.," Putin said. Trump said there are "just a very few" issues to resolve concerning the war in Ukraine, without providing any sense of what those issues might be. ‌ "Some are not that significant," Trump said. "One is probably the most significant, but we have a very good chance of getting there. We didn't get there, but we have a very good chance of getting there." The president said he's "always had a fantastic relationship" with **Putin**. He referenced the U.S. government investigations into Russia's support for his 2016 presidential campaign and repeated his claims of the U.S. economy being the "hottest" in the world. 7. Putin made it clear he still thinks Ukraine is part of Russia **Putin** repeated Moscow's long-held position that it is "sincerely interested in putting an end" to the war in Ukraine, but for that to happen, "all the root causes of the crisis ... must be eliminated." ‌ What he means by that, as he explained in a rambling essay shortly after the invasion three years ago, is that Ukraine isn't a real country, and it breaking away from mother Russia is the root cause of the war. "All of Russia's legitimate concerns must be taken into account, and a fair balance in the security sphere in Europe and the world as a whole must be restored," Putin said. 8. 'Next time in Moscow' At the end of the "press conference", Trump said to Putin: "Thank you Vladimir, I will probably see you again very soon." ‌ Putin ominously replied (in English): "Next time in Moscow..." Trump made a weird "oooooh" sound, then admitted he might "get a little heat for that one." ‌ 9. Trump thinks everything went very well indeed, thankyou In an interview with (who else?) Fox News' Sean Hannity after the summit, Trump said he was "very happy to hear [Putin] say that if I was president that war would have never happened." It's been one of Trump's least plausible talking points since taking office. Hannity, to his credit, asked if Putin had given any specifics as to why that was the case. ‌ Trump replied: "It did. It doesn't matter at this point.' The President also claimed Putin had said: "I've never seen anybody do so much so country is, like, hot as a pistol," curiously echoing another of Trump's talking points. "A lot of points were agreed on," Trump said of progress towards a deal. ‌ "There's not that much. There's one or two pretty significant items. But I think they can be reached." In the end, Trump sort of shrugged and said: "Now it's really up to President Zelenskyy to get it done." We haven't seen what, if anything, was agreed with Putin yet, but we can probably take from this that if he objects to anything, it'll be another Oval Office showdown... ‌ Get Donald Trump updates straight to your WhatsApp! As the world attempts to keep up with Trump's antics, the Mirror has launched its very own US Politics WhatsApp community where you'll get all the latest news from across the pond. We'll send you the latest breaking updates and exclusives all directly to your phone. Users must download or already have WhatsApp on their phones to join in. All you have to do to join is click on this link, select 'Join Chat' and you're in! We may also send you stories from other titles across the Reach group. We will also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose Exit group. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. 10. Putin told Trump he agreed with him on mail-in voting Vladimir Putin, someone you would always go to for an expert opinion on free and fair elections, says Trump was right about 2020 being rigged. Trump said to Hannity: "Vladimir Putin said something - one of the most interesting things. He said 'your election was rigged because you have mail in voting.' ‌ "He said, 'mail in voting, every election - no country has mail in voting. It's impossible to have mail in voting and have honest elections.' "And he said that to me because we talked about 2020. He said, 'you won that election by so much.'" ‌ 11. After lengthy calls with world leaders, Zelensky will meet Trump on Monday There were reportedly lengthy calls between Trump and world leaders on Air Force One on his way back to Washington DC. He spoke with Keir Starmer, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, French President Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, Finnish President Alexander Stubb, Polish President Karol Nawrocki, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte. Mr Starmer is due to speak again with European leaders this morning. ‌ Mr Zelensky said the call began as a one-on-one between him and the US president, before European Nato leaders joined them. The Ukrainian leader also suggested he would travel to Washington DC at the start of next week to continue talks. Writing on social media, the Ukrainian president said: "We support President Trump's proposal for a trilateral meeting between Ukraine, the USA, and Russia. Ukraine emphasises that key issues can be discussed at the level of leaders, and a trilateral format is suitable for this. "On Monday, I will meet with President Trump in Washington DC, to discuss all of the details regarding ending the killing and the war. I am grateful for the invitation." European allies must be "involved at every stage to ensure reliable security guarantees together with America", he added.

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