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Simone Biles is still a winner
Simone Biles' leadership on the mat has never been questioned. After her shocking withdrawal from Tuesday's team final, she proved just as capable a leader off of it.
What happened: During the first rotation, Biles performed an uncharacteristically bad vault, appearing to lose herself in midair.
- Within minutes, she pulled herself from the competition, later explaining that she wasn't in the right headspace and felt she'd be a liability to the team.
- Her teammates still put together a brilliant, silver-medal performance. The Russians won gold.
What they're saying: "At the end of the day, I have to do what's right for me and focus on my mental health," Biles told reporters.
- "I'm not going to lose a medal for this country and for these girls ... They worked too hard. ... It's not worth it, especially when you have three amazing athletes who can step up."
- Biles supported her teammates from the sidelines, and afterward, they returned the favor: "This medal is definitely for [Simone]," said Jordan Chiles. "If it wasn't for her, we wouldn't be here."
- "We have a fundamental misconception of what it means to be tough," Olympic performance coach Steve Magness told NYT. "It's not gritting our teeth through everything; it's having the space to make the right choice despite pressure, stress and fatigue."
The backdrop: This didn't come out of nowhere. The day before her withdrawal, Biles wrote on Instagram that she feels "the weight of the world on [her] shoulders at times."
- She also said in the docuseries, "Simone vs Herself," that she was "nervous she might freak out" without her parents present because they've never missed a competition of hers.
- Aly Raisman, who won team gold in 2012 and 2016, told Today: "The amount of pressure that everyone has been putting on her is just, it's too much."
The big picture: Biles, 24, is nearing the end of a historic gymnastics career. But by becoming the latest high-profile athlete to speak openly about mental health, her next chapter could be even more meaningful.
- When Michael Phelps opened up about his mental health struggles, he became a role model for those fighting the same demons.
- Now, two of the greatest and most famous Olympians in history will share that mantle, serving as constant reminders that even superhuman athletes are still just people.
What's next: Biles has withdrawn from Thursday's individual all-around competition, with Jade Carey set to take her place. It's unclear if she will compete in the four individual events.
- All-around: Sunisa Lee and Jade Carey (Thursday)
- Vault: Biles and Carey (Sunday)
- Uneven bars: Biles and Lee (Sunday)
- Floor: Biles and Carey (Monday)
- Beam: Biles and Lee (Tuesday)
Behind the scenes of the Biden administration as the U.S. ditches Kabul
Many in the U.S. military see the race out of Afghanistan as a dishonorable withdrawal, and some State Department officials fear the U.S. may have to close the embassy in Kabul.
Driving the news: Those were some of the dire soundings Axios heard in Washington yesterday, as the Pentagon made the shocking announcement that 3,000 U.S. troops will head into Afghanistan to help evacuate Americans.
It got worse overnight: The Taliban overran the capital of Helmand province after years of blood spilled by American, British and NATO forces.
- The Taliban has also captured the country’s second and third-largest cities, Kandahar and Herat, in a lightning advance that's encircling the government in the capital, Kabul, AP reports.
How we got here: It wasn't crazy for President Biden and his national security team, including the Pentagon, to have imagined that the Afghan forces — with superior technology and manpower — could have done a much better job holding the Taliban at bay.
- But senior U.S. officials are privately acknowledging that the Afghans appear psychologically defeated — and there was insufficient accounting for the psychological consequences of the long war.
- The fact that U.S. officials are drawing down so soon to a skeleton staff suggests they harbor grave doubts about the embassy's viability.
Senior Pentagon officials expressed deep distress:
- One source said we shouldn’t underestimate the effect it has on the U.S. military's morale to carry out a mission — withdrawal and evacuation — that many view as dishonorable.
The U.S. is playing it extremely safe with the evacuation.
- "All of the top people in the Biden administration lived through the pain of Benghazi," said William Wechsler, the director of Middle East Programs at the Atlantic Council, and a Pentagon counterterrorism official in the Obama administration.
- Wechsler said they "understand how damaging such a situation can be, not only to our interests abroad but also politically at home."
What Biden's thinking
President Biden's senior national security team briefed him Wednesday night on the deteriorating battlefield situation in Afghanistan — and plans to dispatch forces to evacuate American personnel, Afghan translators and others who helped with the war effort.
- At 7:30 Thursday morning, Biden's top national security advisers met to review the president's questions from the previous night.
There was unanimous agreement on the order that Biden later gave Defense Secretary Austin: Thousands of Marines are being dispatched to Kabul and surrounding areas.
- At the same time, Biden's diplomatic team in Doha, Qatar, was trying to talk sense into the Taliban. But events on the ground have made a mockery of the peace process.
The White House is the most self-assured group of the national-security teams:
- Biden's key aides aren't second-guessing his decision to withdraw.
- They derive comfort from the fact that the American public is behind them — an overwhelming majority support withdrawal from Afghanistan — and they bet they won’t be punished politically for executing a withdrawal.
West Wing officials reject the notion that they could keep Afghanistan stable indefinitely with a small force of around 3,000 that they inherited from Trump.
- The Biden team's line is that the only reason the Taliban wasn’t killing Americans last year was because Trump had agreed to leave on May 1 this year. When that deadline passed, they contend, there would be no way to guarantee peace and stability with such a small force.
Republicans, led by hawkish Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, are zeroing in on the larger consequences of a chaotic and dangerous withdrawal.
- Graham sent a letter to Biden’s Pentagon leaders on Tuesday asking whether they wanted to review their June assessment to Congress that the removal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan would bring a medium risk of terrorist organizations re-emerging to threaten our homeland within two years.
- The Pentagon didn't respond to a request for comment on whether they’ve amended this timeline in light of the Taliban’s recent conquests.
"The ripple effect of what’s going on in Afghanistan is devastating," Graham told Axios in a phone interview Thursday. "To lose in one place hurts you in every place."
Democrat brushes off GOP efforts to tie party to Kabul fallout ahead of midterms
Republican efforts to saddle the Democrats with fallout from the fall of Kabul won't necessarily fly with voters — or instill fears in midterm candidates.
Why it matters: Axios traveled to Virginia’s 7th District last week, where Rep. Abigail Spanberger is running for re-election in a bellwether district. She focused solely on selling President Biden’s stimulus package and the bipartisan infrastructure deal still working its way through Congress.
- In conversations the congresswoman had with her Richmond-area constituents, Afghanistan didn't come up.
- She drew greater reaction for her efforts to bring broadband to rural areas.
- “We might not have a Taliban, but with the Capitol insurrection and the partisanship, we don’t have a government that functions,” said Carena Ives, a 53-year-old restaurant owner. “We need to focus on home.”
What they're saying: It’s just one piece of evidence, albeit anecdotal, that Biden’s handling of the Afghanistan withdrawal may not be the political cudgel Republicans hope for the midterms.
- “I don’t blame Trump. I don’t blame Biden, because he continued the withdrawal. We can’t perfect the world,” said Annie Tobey, 61.
- Elyse Shoenig, 75, whose late husband was a Vietnam veteran, said when she saw the images from the fall of Kabul, she was immediately reminded of Saigon.
- Asked whether it will affect the way she votes, she replied, “Not yet. But I will need to see the situation play out.”
Between the lines: Spanberger, 42, is a former CIA analyst who defeated a Republican in 2018 to end the GOP's 36-year hold of the district.
- She was narrowly re-elected in 2020, as Joe Biden squeaked by President Trump in the 7th District.
- Spanberger was thrust into the spotlight just after Election Day when a leaked phone conversation caught her criticizing the defund-the-police rhetoric embraced by some Democrats.
- As if channeling her constituents' current thinking, Spanberger held a roundtable focused on expanding broadband at a rural brewery. She also stopped by Carena’s Jamaican Grille to learn how the stimulus bill had helped keep the restaurant afloat.
Spanberger told Axios she's still prepared for Afghanistan to be used as a political weapon.
- “[Opponents] will use anything for political leverage. They’ll use the fact that I drink a decaf as opposed to a caffeinated coffee, but even the most engaged or disengaged voter recognizes that this is a complicated issue,” she said.
- The congresswoman added that there's only a very small contingency of Americans who wanted to stay in Afghanistan.
- “Any person who says, ‘That’s 100% wrong, therefore I’m not voting for Democrats,’ well, did that person not want to leave?”
The congresswoman didn't travel to Afghanistan while in the CIA but did work on gathering intelligence for counterterrorism efforts in the Middle East.
- “There is no world in which we can see the collapse of Kabul to the Taliban and not think, probably we should have done something better, different,” she said.
Be smart: One constituent, Immanuel Sutherland, 50, said: “I don't want to be quick to just rush to judgment knowing this was a situation that is not going to be easy to get out of.”




