Seth Meyers urges US to shelter Afghan refugees Asylum is the bare minimum
Late-night TV hosts Seth Meyers, Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Fallon have all addressed the widespread fear and devastation unfolding in Afghanistan after the United States withdrew its forces from the country and the Taliban promptly seized the capital.
On Monday, âLate Night,â âThe Late Showâ and âThe Tonight Showâ aired segments commenting on President Bidenâs handling of the decades-long crisis inherited from previous administrations.
The Taliban â" which had subjected Afghan citizens to cruel restrictions and punishments during its five-year reign of terror â" recaptured Kabul Sunday after Biden carried out the Trump administrationâs plan to remove American troops from Afghanistan this year and the local government collapsed.
âThatâs right: Last year, Trump made a peace deal with the Taliban to end the war, and now â" after Bidenâs withdrawal â" theyâre back in power,â Fallon said on âThe Tonight Show.â âSo, on the bright side, itâs nice to have a bipartisan screw-up.â
âThe crushing reality of the so-called Global War on Terror is, some of the highest ranking officials involved in it now admit that it was a colossal failure,â Meyers said on âLate Night.â âAnd thatâs a reality we should all grapple with. Presidents, politicians and foreign policy elites of both parties deserve blame for this calamity.â
World & Nation
Taliban says women can be âvery active in society.â A watching world is skeptical
The Taliban pledges to restore calm in Afghanistan, eschew revenge and respect womenâs rights â" up to a point.
Amid mounting anxiety across the besieged nation, the Taliban has publicly stated that it âdoesnât want women to be victimsâ under its new regime, despite formerly terrorizing women and girls by largely denying them access to employment and education, among other forms of discrimination. Those who resisted were met with public harassment, beatings and death.
âContrary to everything theyâve ever done or said, the Taliban have promised that, this time, theyâre going to respect womenâs rights,â Colbert said on âThe Late Show.â âBut the crackdowns already began at a bank in Kandahar. Armed Taliban gunmen forced women working there to leave the bank and told them male relatives could take their place.
âThat is awful â" also, not good hiring practice. âMr. Wilson, unfortunately as a woman, I cannot perform your open-heart surgery today. But youâll be in great hands with my cousin, Dylan. No, heâs not a doctor, but he does have a penis.ââ
World & Nation
âI definitely want to stayâ: Afghan women grapple with prospect of life under the Taliban again
As the U.S. hastens to exit Afghanistan by Aug. 31, women fear a potential return to power by the Taliban and its harsh view of their role in society.
Overall, Colbert appeared conflicted about the White Houseâs move to release American service members from Afghanistan. On Monday, Biden doubled down on his decision to go through with the retreat, arguing that âAmerican troops cannot â" and should not â" be fighting in a war, and dying in a war, that the Afghans are not willing to fight for themselves.â
âYou can make us accept that there was no good alternative, but you canât make us feel good about it,â Colbert said. âFor the last 20 years, four separate administrations told the American people to care about the plight of all the Afghan people, especially the women.
âAnd we did care, and thatâs not going to change. All thatâs changed is thereâs nothing we can do about it now. So pulling out may be the right thing to do. But itâs heartbreaking.â
Politics
Biden stands by Afghanistan withdrawal, says there was no good time to leave
President Biden addressed the American people about the messy U.S. pullout from Afghanistan. He stood by his decision and said there was no good time to leave.
On âLate Night,â Meyers echoed his colleagueâs solemn sentiments and urged the U.S. government to help âas many Afghan refugees as possible, as quickly as possible,â after several harrowing reports surfaced of Afghans making desperate, sometimes deadly attempts to flee the country.
âThat includes Afghans who worked with the U.S. Army, but it shouldnât be limited to them,â Meyers said.
âTaking in as many Afghan refugees as want to come here and granting them asylum is the bare minimum we can do. ... The priority should be getting them out now and worrying about the paperwork later.â