The failure of the Biden administration to name the two Islamic State terrorists killed in a US drone strike in Afghanistan on Friday has led some experts to conclude they were not high-value targets.

In a press conference Saturday, Major Gen. William Taylor only referred to the dead targets as a “planner” and “facilitator,” and would not say if they played specific roles in the airport suicide attack Thursday that killed 13 American soldiers and 169 Afghans. Islamic State Khorasan, or ISIS-K, was behind the attack.

“Normally if they get a high-profile guy they like to name him,” retired US Army Lt. Col Brian F. Sullivan told The Post.

“They keep talking BS about ‘eyes over the horizon’ but I think a lot of this is the administration blowing more smoke,” Sullivan added. “They’re throwing this up as if the US is reacting with strength and power. So that makes the score something like ISIS 200-US two. Who are they kidding?”

US Army Lt. Col. Brian F. Sullivan told The Post that the ISIS member would have been named had they been
US Army Lt. Col. Brian F. Sullivan told The Post that the ISIS member would have been named had they been “high-profile.”
David McGlynn

Sullivan, an officer involved in the withdrawal of US forces from Vietnamese coastal cities in the 1970s, pointed out that by rapidly droning the alleged planner of the ISIS attack, “they must have known who he was beforehand.

“If they knew about this why didn’t they drone the sonofabitch beforehand? They are flat-ass lying to us.”

The ex-officer said it was also possible the names were concealed in order to land a bigger target down the line.

In a statement Saturday, President Biden promised more drone strikes targeting terrorists.

The Pentagon believes that “thousands” of ISIS-K fighters were set loose after the Taliban reconquered Afghanistan and released inmates from military prisons.

A Taliban fighter stands guard at the site of the August 26 twin suicide bombs, which killed scores of people including 13 US troops, at Kabul airport on August 27.
A Taliban fighter stands guard at the site of the Aug. 26 twin suicide bombs.
AFP via Getty Images
Afghans lie on beds at a hospital after they were wounded in the suicide bomber attacks.
Afghans lie on beds at a hospital after they were wounded in the suicide bomber attacks.
Wali Sabawoon/AP

“I said we would go after the group responsible for the attack on our troops and innocent civilians in Kabul, and we have,” said Biden. “This strike was not the last. We will continue to hunt down any person involved in that heinous attack and make them pay.”

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