Fact check: Did Biden leave Marines in Russia and Afghanistan?
After the release of WNBA star Brittney Griner, U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany, a Wisconsin Republican, was among those who criticized President Joe Biden for failures in getting the release of other prisoners being held in foreign countries. PolitiFact checks his tweet.
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After the release of WNBA star Brittney Griner, U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany, a Wisconsin Republican, was among those who criticized President Joe Biden for failures in getting the release of other prisoners being held in foreign countries.
"Joe Biden left Marines behind in Afghanistan. And now he left a Marine behind in Russia," Tiffany wrote in a Dec. 8 tweet. "Americans are tired of his weakness on the world stage.’
But did Biden really leave Marines in Afghanistan? And is there a Marine still being held in Russia?
Let’s take a closer look.
No Marines remain in Afghanistan after 2021 withdrawal
First, let’s consider the portion of the claim regarding Afghanistan.
When we asked Tiffany’s office for clarification on that part of the statement, his communications director, Caroline Briscoe, said it was "in reference to the U.S. Marines who were killed in President Biden’s chaotic and botched Afghanistan withdrawal."
Although it’s true that the withdrawal from Afghanistan was fast and hectic, there weren’t actually any Marines left behind after the withdrawal, and none remain today.
John Hall, an associate professor of U.S. military history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s College of Letters and Science, said Tiffany’s characterization in the claim is a bit misleading.
"It’s worth emphasizing that the withdrawal was completed on an aggressive but deliberate schedule set by US Forces Afghanistan," he said in a Dec. 21 email. "Weeks later, the U.S. had to send units (including Marines and a brigade of the 82nd Airborne Division) back into Afghanistan to execute a noncombatant evacuation operation, and these units also retrograded on schedule without leaving anyone behind."
So, Tiffany is wrong here.
Marine veteran in Russia was discharged nearly a decade before Russian arrest
Now let’s take a look at whether or not there is a Marine left behind in Russia.
When asked about this portion of the claim, Tiffany’s team said he was referring to Paul Whelan, who is currently imprisoned in Russia.
Griner, who was imprisoned in Russia for about 10 months over a drug charge, was exchanged for Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout, who was serving a 25-year sentence in the U.S.
Critics of the trade were quick to point to Whelan, who was arrested in 2018 in Moscow. Experts say Russian officials view his case differently, because he was convicted of espionage.
But in how Tiffany phrased the claim, he suggests Whelan is an active duty member. And, beyond that, the claim makes no reference to his checkered history that led to his discharge.
After leaving the Marines, Whelan spent more than a decade working as a corporate security expert, The Washington Post reported, and at the time of his arrest was corporate security director at BorgWarner, a Michigan-based automotive parts supplier.
Trump said in a social media post that he declined to release Bout in exchange for Whelan in 2018, because he "wouldn’t have made the deal for a hundred people in exchange for someone that has killed untold numbers of people with his arms deals."
So, while Whelan is still being detained in Russia, he wasn’t taken into custody as a Marine, and he wasn’t in Russia as an active-duty Marine, either.
PolitiFact ruling
Tiffany claimed that Biden has left Marines behind in both Afghanistan and in Russia during his time in office.
Although the withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021 was hectic and resulted in the deaths of 13 U.S. Marines, none were left behind when the withdrawal was complete.
As for Russia, Whelan was discharged from the Marines about a decade before his arrest. He was also not in Russia on any Marines-related business at the time, either. But, as noted, the view of the Marine Corps is that one truly never becomes a former Marine.
We rate this claim Mostly False, meaning "the statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression."
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