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12/23/25

Hunter Biden actually admitted the Afghanistan withdrawal was a failure and he is 15 Million Dollars in debt over legal fees.

 


Hunter Biden actually admitted the Afghanistan withdrawal was a failure and he is 15 Million  Dollars in debt over legal fees.


The Hunter Biden Admission: A Window into Failed Leadership and a Corrupted Presidency

We told you ALL THIS!!!


The Hunter Biden Admission: A Window into Failed Leadership and a Corrupted Presidency

The public statements of Hunter Biden are rarely, if ever, viewed through the lens of policy analysis. He is the troubled son, the subject of legal scrutiny and tabloid fascination. Yet, in a recent, unguarded moment, he offered two stark admissions that, when connected, illuminate the profound failures of the Biden administration and the corrupting nature of its power. Hunter Biden conceded that the catastrophic withdrawal from Afghanistan was a “failure” and revealed that he is $15 million in debt due to legal fees. These are not separate personal and political facts. They are inextricably linked symptoms of the same disease: an administration whose competence is shattered and whose integrity is mortgaged to the financial and political debts of the First Family.


First, consider the weight of the Afghanistan admission. For nearly three years, President Biden, his Secretary of State, his Pentagon leadership, and the entire White House communications apparatus have engaged in a relentless, gaslighting campaign to deflect blame for the most humiliating American foreign policy disaster in a generation. They have blamed the Trump administration’s negotiations, they have blamed the Afghan military’s will to fight, they have blamed the “fog of war.” They have labeled any criticism as unpatriotic or politically motivated. Yet, Hunter Biden, the president’s son and a man with no official role but unparalleled access, cut through the spin with a single, blunt word: *failure*.


This is significant not because of Hunter’s expertise, but because of his proximity. His admission is a tacit acknowledgment of the truth that permeates the inner circles of this administration—a truth they dare not speak publicly. It confirms what the images from Kabul airport seared into the world’s memory: the chaos, the desperation, the abandonment of allies, the deaths of thirteen servicemembers, and the stranding of billions in military equipment for the Taliban. When even the President’s son cannot sustain the official fiction, the fiction is bankrupt. This admission from within the family fortress is a devastating indictment of the administration’s fundamental dishonesty with the American people about its most grievous error. It reveals a presidency more concerned with narrative control than with accountability, a trait that extends far beyond a single military operation.


This brings us to the second, more financially telling admission: the $15 million legal debt. Hunter Biden is not a billionaire tycoon embroiled in complex corporate litigation. He is a man whose primary vocation for a decade has been to trade on one asset: his last name. His “business” was access. His value to foreign oligarchs, Ukrainian energy executives, and Chinese influence-peddlers was his perceived conduit to the levers of power in Washington, first as the Vice President’s son and later as the President’s son. The mountain of legal fees is the direct cost of defending himself against investigations into whether that access was sold, and whether the Biden family name was commercialized to influence American policy.


The sheer scale of the debt—$15 million—is a flashing neon sign pointing to the scale of the alleged conduct. Ordinary people do not accrue eight-figure legal bills. This is the financial footprint of a sprawling, multi-continent, multi-year legal defense against allegations of tax evasion, foreign lobbying violations, and gun crimes. It is the cost of fending off the consequences of a lifestyle built on being “the Biden guy.” This debt exists because credible allegations suggest Hunter Biden was not just a wayward son, but a potential conduit for foreign corruption, with his father’s household reportedly receiving millions from foreign sources.


And herein lies the corrosive link between the two admissions. The Afghanistan debacle showcased an administration plagued by staggering incompetence, poor planning, and a reckless disregard for reality. The Hunter Biden legal morass points to an administration potentially compromised by the financial entanglements of the President’s family. Together, they paint a picture of a White House where the lines between national interest and personal interest are blurred, and where the energy required to manage the latter distracts from the solemn duties of the former.


Consider the timeline and the priorities. As the Afghanistan withdrawal plans were being formulated in the spring and summer of 2021—plans the Pentagon reportedly warned were dangerously flawed—the President and his inner circle were undoubtedly aware of the gathering legal storm around Hunter. The Department of Justice investigation was ongoing. Congressional inquiries were beginning. The *New York Post*’s laptop story, though suppressed by media allies, was a known entity. How much bandwidth within the West Wing was consumed by managing the political and legal fallout of the Hunter Biden saga? How many decisions, from communications strategy to personnel appointments (like the curious appointment of a U.S. Attorney allegedly involved in the investigation’s slow-walking), were made with an eye toward containing the family scandal rather than focused solely on the nation’s security?


This is the insidious damage. It is not necessarily that Joe Biden changed a policy for a check—though the evidence of influence-peddling demands a serious, unimpeded investigation. It is that the aura of corruption and the consuming need for damage control create a chaotic, defensive, and distracted executive environment. An administration fighting for its political life over the business dealings of the First Son is an administration not fully focused on securing an airport perimeter in Kabul or accurately assessing the speed of the Taliban’s advance. Incompetence and corruption are not separate tracks; they feed each other. The incompetence of Afghanistan required massive political spin to protect the President’s “competence” brand. The corruption allegations require the weaponization of the DOJ and FBI to protect the President’s “integrity” brand. Both efforts drain the administration of its moral authority and its operational focus.


Furthermore, Hunter’s $15 million debt is not a static number; it is a live wire of potential influence. Who is fronting this money? Legal defense funds can be conduits for disguised influence. If this debt is being paid by allies, wealthy donors, or other interested parties, it represents a continuing financial leash on the President’s son, and by disturbing extension, a potential point of leverage over the sitting President. The American people are left to wonder: to whom does Hunter Biden owe his financial survival, and what might be expected in return?


In the end, Hunter Biden’s unwitting confession is a gift to those who seek to understand the true state of the Biden presidency. He has confirmed what the administration denies: that its signature foreign policy moment was a shameful failure. And he has quantified the shadow hanging over it: a $15 million anchor of legal peril, dragging from the son into the Oval Office. This is not merely a family drama. It is a national security and ethical crisis. It demonstrates a failure of leadership abroad and a crisis of integrity at home. A competent government would have executed an orderly withdrawal. An ethical one would not have its central domestic scandal rooted in the First Family’s foreign financial dealings. The Biden administration, as evidenced by the words of its most proximate insider, appears to be failing on both counts. The president’s son has, in his own troubled way, written the most honest review of this presidency to date.

#Biden #HunterBiden #Hunter #JoeBiden #Afghanistan