Two Republican lawmakers are calling on President Biden to recognize figures from Afghanistan’s opposition group as the “legitimate government representatives” in the country and that the Taliban takeover is “illegal.”
“After speaking with Afghan Vice President Amrullah Saleh and representatives of Ahmad Massoud, we are calling on the Biden Administration to recognize these leaders as the legitimate government representatives of Afghanistan,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Rep. Mike Waltz (R-Fla.) said in a joint statement on Friday.
“We ask the Biden Administration to recognize that the Afghan Constitution is still intact, and the Afghan Taliban takeover is illegal,” they added.
Earlier this month, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani fled the country the same day that Kabul was overtaken by the Taliban amid a withdrawal of U.S. troops. Ghani said that he left the country to avoid further bloodshed.
Two days after Ghani left, Saleh declared that he was the “caretaker” president according to Afghanistan’s constitution.
“Clarity: As per d constitution of Afg, in absence, escape, resignation or death of the President the FVP becomes the caretaker President. I am currently inside my country & am the legitimate care taker President. Am reaching out to all leaders to secure their support & consensus,” Saleh tweeted on Aug. 17, whose Twitter bio says “acting president.”
Massoud is the son of Ahmad Shah Massoud, an Afghan mujahedeen leader who staved off Soviet and Taliban forces from gaining ground in the Panjshir Valley in past conflicts in the country, The Associated Press reported. That valley, which is north of Kabul, is considered the last current stronghold against the Taliban where both Massoud and Saleh currently reside.
“We call on President Biden to designate the Afghan Taliban as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, and we urge him to publicly support Congressional efforts to stand with our friends in the Panjshir Valley who will serve as a bulwark against regional terror,” the two Republicans said in their joint statement.
Officials have been cautious over how to depict the Taliban, though some leaders, including British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, have said they did not want any entities recognizing the Taliban as the legitimate government of Afghanistan.
“We don’t want anybody bilaterally recognising the Taliban,” Johnson said. “We want a united position amongst all the like-minded as far as we can get one so that we do whatever we can to prevent Afghanistan lapsing back into being a breeding ground for terror.”