The UK’s withdrawal from Afghanistan last year was a “disaster” and a “betrayal” that will damage the nation’s interests for years, an inquiry by MPs has found.
The Foreign Affairs Committee said there had been “systemic failures” of intelligence, diplomacy and planning.
Chairman Tom Tugendhat said there had been a failure to lead “at a time when lives were quite literally being lost”.
The UK government said “intensive planning” went into the withdrawal.
A spokesperson for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) defended its handling of the withdrawal and said it would review and respond to the committee’s findings.
They added they had lost confidence in the department’s top civil servant, Sir Philip Barton, and urged him to consider his position.
The report said the fact Sir Philip, the then-Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab and Prime Minister Boris Johnson were all on leave when the Taliban took Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul, “marks a fundamental lack of seriousness, grip or leadership at a time of national emergency”.
Mr Tugendhat told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “It’s a very clear criticism of the failure to plan, the failure to prepare, and the failure to lead at a moment of extraordinary national emergency, at a time when lives were quite literally being lost, at a time when every decision was fraught with risk, and highly contentious, and needed to be made very quickly by people who had the authority to do so.”
The “fundamental failure” was one of leadership, the Conservative MP added.
Labour shadow foreign secretary David Lammy said the report “highlights the scale of the government’s incompetence, laziness and mishandling” of the withdrawal.
“The Conservative government has badly let down Britain’s reputation on the global stage and those responsible for this calamity should be held accountable,” he said.
The PM’s official spokesman said Mr Johnson retained full confidence in Sir Philip.
Asked why he remained the right person to head the FCDO, the spokesman said: “He has significant experience in that field and a number of changes have already been made.”
The spokesman also said Mr Johnson did not regret making Mr Raab deputy prime minister after the evacuation.
A coalition of international forces – led by the US – completed their withdrawal from Afghanistan on 30 August 2021, marking the end of the 20-year campaign in the country.
US-led forces went into Afghanistan in 2001, removing the Taliban from power in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, which were blamed on al-Qaeda – a militant jihadist group.
The UK sent forces but ended its combat operations in 2014, leaving hundreds of troops to help train the Afghan government’s army.
In February 2020, a withdrawal deal was signed by the Taliban and the US under former President Donald Trump and a year later his successor, Joe Biden, honoured the agreement.
As the US pulled out troops and reduced military support for the Afghan army, the Taliban made rapid territorial gains, reclaiming control of the whole country by mid-August.