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Afghanistan withdrawal: The long-term security and economic implications according to experts, officials

The botched withdrawal from Afghanistan hindered the U.S. ability to monitor security challenges in the region, and ceded ground to China, warned experts and lawmakers.

This article is part of a Fox News Digital series examining the consequences of the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan one year ago this week.

A year after the U.S. withdrew all troops from Afghanistan, paving the way for a Taliban takeover, current and former government officials and national security experts weighed in on the long-term economic and national security implications for the United States. 

Without a presence on the ground, it is difficult to "capture the intelligence you need" for counterterrorism, warned former Secretary of Defense Mark Esper

Michelle Flournoy, who served as under secretary of defense for policy under President Obama, also warned that monitoring terrorism in Afghanistan would be more difficult without a military presence. 

"It's not impossible. We do it in other parts of the world, but we need to at least keep our eye on that challenge," she said. 

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Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, focused on the ramifications for the Afghan people, as well as the lost economic opportunity as a result of withdrawing troops. 

"And right now we see it with widespread hunger, with millions of Afghans that are starving at a point of starvation. We see the abuse of women and of girls and how they are further restricting their rights and abilities in Afghanistan," Ernst said. 

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Ernst also noted that the U.S. withdrawal has paved the way for China to engage economically in the region, particularly when it came to natural resources. 

"We know that there is an approximate $1.3 trillion bed of resources and minerals, rare earth minerals that exist in Afghanistan," she said. "And we left and no longer have a presence there. Who does? The Chinese. They have over 60 contracts now to do mining operations to further their national security interests, while now the United States will fall behind in that area."

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Joseph Nye, former assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, said the withdrawal was a "black eye" for the United States, but that it is not "a big strategic change" for the United States. 

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Esper added that a "silver lining" of the U.S. no longer having a military presence in Afghanistan is the ability to focus on other threats around the world.

"We now can focus on the bigger challenges, the bigger threats that are out there. And that begins with China, Russia, and in that region, Iran," he said. 

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Biden’s decision to withdraw troops completely from Afghanistan faced widespread backlash after the Taliban retook the country just days later, and 13 service members were killed in a subsequent attack at Kabul Airport.

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