https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/th...3cH?li=BBnb7Kz
                                         
                                        For the second time in four days Sunday, a major media outlet  reported that the Taliban had been provided with a list of names of  those seeking to evacuate Afghanistan. This has led critics to accuse  the Biden administration of endangering those people. 
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What the Biden administration has said about giving the Taliban lists
      
       
             
   
 
     
       
  
 
     Along the way, the administration has provided some carefully  worded comments that stopped short of truly disputing the story. But it  has now edged closer to a fuller denial — despite the most recent report  indicating a list of those who ultimately couldn’t be evacuated was  given to the Taliban. 
  The controversy began with a Politico  report last week. The report cited anonymous U.S. and congressional  officials who said the U.S. government “
gave the Taliban a list of names of American citizens, green card holders and Afghan allies to grant entry into the militant-controlled outer perimeter of the city’s airport.” 
  The New York Times on Sunday reported on 
a more specific list:  one containing names of students and family members from the American  University of Afghanistan who were ultimately turned away from the gates  at the Kabul airport because evacuations are ending: 
   The group was then alarmed after learning that their names had been  shared with the Taliban fighters guarding the airport checkpoints.  [university president Ian] Bickford said that the university had given  the names only to the U.S. military. 
  “They  told us: We have given your names to the Taliban,” said Hosay, a  24-year-old sophomore studying business administration who was on the  bus on Sunday. “We are all terrified. There is no evacuation, there is  no getting out.” 
The Times report initially stated  that Bickford had said the U.S. military shared the information. It has  been corrected to state that Bickford was uncertain who shared it, but  that he had only shared the information with the military. 
             
   The situation at American University is particularly bad because the Taliban has targeted it before, including launching 
a terrorist attack in 2016 that killed 15 people.  As recently as two weeks ago, the Taliban posted a picture describing  the school as a training ground for infidel “wolves,” the Times reports.  (Washington Post columnist Charles Lane 
highlighted the plight of those affiliated with the school last week.) 
   Through it all, critics, including many congressional Republicans,  have accused the Biden administration of essentially handing over “kill  lists” — a phrase used by an anonymous defense official quoted in the  Politico report. 
  The administration has denied the existence of  lists that have endangered people, but there have been plenty of  apparently deliberate caveats in how officials up to and including  President Biden have responded to the stories. 
  Biden was asked  about the first story Thursday, and he said he was unfamiliar with  whether lists were shared, but pointed to the need to identify people on  buses to facilitate evacuations. 
  “There have been occasions  when our military has contacted their military counterparts in the  Taliban and said … for example, ‘This bus is coming through with X  number of people on it, made up of the following group of people. We  want you to let that bus or that group through,' ” Biden said. “So, yes,  there have been occasions like that.” 
  But Biden added that “I  can’t tell you with any certitude that there’s actually been a list of  names. … It could very well have happened.” 
  White House  National Security Council spokeswoman Emily Horne added in a comment to  Politico that “in limited cases we have shared information with the  Taliban that has successfully facilitated evacuations from Kabul.” 
   Both of those comments indicate information on would-be evacuees was  shared, but they suggest it wasn’t detailed or expansive. 
  State  Department spokesman Ned Price was more forceful in pushing back Friday  — though his comments were more geared toward denying the endangerment  of people than actually denying that lists were handed over. 
   “What I can say is that the idea that we are providing names or  personally identifiable information to the Taliban in a way that exposes  anyone to additional risk — that is simply wrong,” Price said,  repeating much the same phrasing later. 
  This prompted some to claim Price had denied the existence of any lists, but he had really only denied that there were lists 
that endangered people. 
  By Sunday, though, the administration became more explicit in its pushback. 
   White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told CNN’s “State  of the Union” that the administration did indeed dispute the Politico  report. 
  “We’ve actually aggressively and decisively disputed  that report,” Sullivan said. “We were giving no list of all of the  American [Special Immigrant Visa] holders to the Taliban or any other  kind of big list.” 
  What the administration actually seemed to  dispute before then, though, wasn’t the substance of the report, but  rather the idea that the list was large or that the claims in it from  some critics that this constituted some kind of “kill list.” The report  never claimed there was a “big list,” much less a list provided of “all  the American SIV holders.” 
  Sullivan then walked closer to a  full denial, stating that “some idea that we’re handing over databases  or lists to the Taliban is simply unfounded and inaccurate.” 
   That’s difficult to square with the previous comments suggesting a  perhaps-limited effort that might have included sharing names as part of  the evacuation process. And Sullivan seemed to qualify it by quickly  adding, “What we’re doing is working with core discrete groups of  individuals to get them onto the airfield.” He added that there was  coordination “with the Taliban, group by group, bus by bus, to get  [evacuees] through the Taliban checkpoints and onto the airport  compound.” 
  Secretary of State Antony Blinken was even firmer on  NBC’s “Meet the Press.” He emphasized the endangerment denial but then  pivoted to more fully denying the sharing of any lists. 
  “The idea that we shared lists of Americans or others with the Taliban is simply wrong,” Blinken said flatly. 
   But then Blinken appeared to acknowledge the same thing the others  have acknowledged: that some names were shared as part of the evacuation  process. He even acknowledged this while using the phrase “names on a  list.” 
  “In specific instances when you’re trying to get a bus  or a group of people through, and you need to show a manifest to do  that,” he said. He noted that some people won’t have documentation, so  “you’ll share names on a list of people on the bus so they can be  assured that those are people that we’re looking to bring in. And by  definition, that’s exactly what’s happened.” 
  That doesn’t  really track with Sullivan’s claim that “some idea that we’re handing  over databases or lists to the Taliban is simply unfounded and  inaccurate.” Nor does it track with Blinken saying a few moments earlier  that “the idea that we shared lists of Americans or others with the  Taliban is simply wrong.” 
  And even if you contend that they  meant to deny more extensive lists or lists that actually endangered  people — rather than the existence of 
any lists, period — the  Times report on a list containing names of people who aren’t being  evacuated calls that into question, even as it’s unclear on who  precisely shared the information. 
  Perhaps it’s unavoidable to  have to identify those seeking to evacuate, and perhaps the Biden  administration thinks the whole thing is overblown. But if that’s the  case, it could just say that. Instead it has increasingly claimed that  it wasn’t sharing lists, even as it defends such information-sharing in  specific instances. 
  
Update: This post has been updated to  reflect the Times’s correction on who shared the list of American  University of Afghanistan students and family members.
When teh DPST lying rag WaPo goes after their fiden cabal - eyebrows raise in surprise.
as usual - it is clear teh fiden cabal Lied, Lies and will continue to Lie - and cares nothing for Americans citizens stranded in Afghanistan. 
We need a transport plane to airlift fiden and his cabinet to BAgram AFB - and dump them all there to stay with their beloved Taliban first Terrorists. .