In the two-week period leading up to President Joe Biden’s August 31 deadline for the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, six major American newspapers -- the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and USA Today -- primarily featured centrist or right-leaning figures to discuss the departure, many of whom were angry at the conditions of withdrawal and blamed Biden for the chaos.
In fact, just 17 opinion pieces (we looked at editorials, op-eds, and columns) across all six papers from the study period covering the story were bylined by writers from a left-leaning perspective. That's compared to 61 pieces from right-leaning authors and 67 from centrist or non-ideologically aligned sources, suggesting a bias from these U.S. print outlets slanted toward critics of the Afghanistan withdrawal rather than supporters of ending the war.
Following Biden’s July 8 announcement of his intent to withdraw from Afghanistan, mainstream media voiced intense criticism of that policy, warning that withdrawal was a “historic mistake” that “proves Osama bin Laden right.” Mainstream media also turned to former George W. Bush administration officials and other architects of the war in Afghanistan to provide commentary and condemnation of the withdrawal process. Despite the devastation and chaos that had occurred in Afghanistan over the nearly 20-year-long occupation, coverage of the withdrawal itself from week to week primarily framed the war from the perspective of those who wanted the U.S. military to stay there. (In comparison, polls have consistently shown that a majority of Americans support the decision to withdraw U.S. forces from Afghanistan.)
After the Taliban swept through the Afghan army’s defenses across the country, the capital city of Kabul was captured on August 15 and American news media declared that the war effort was fundamentally over. However, U.S. troops still remained to evacuate refugees and Americans stuck in Afghanistan until August 31, when the war was officially ended by the Biden administration. These two weeks generated a huge amount of interest from the press, particularly with the news of evacuations and a deadly suicide bomb attack at the Kabul airport, and that coverage is the focus of this study.
Media Matters found 143 opinion pieces about the Afghanistan withdrawal published between August 16-30 in the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and USA Today.
We categorized the 98 writers and seven editorial boards that authored those articles as being either left-leaning, right-leaning, or neutral/centrist based on either self-identified political ideology or public affiliation with an openly ideological or partisan organization. Because we employed this strict definition to determine their ideology, we coded some writers, like frequent Fox News contributor and retired Army Gen. Jack Keane or alleged war criminal and former commanding general of the Afghan National Army Sami Sadat as neutral or centrist (although many of those who fell into this camp also argued against the U.S. withdrawal along the same lines as right-leaning columnists).