White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Thursday responded to calls from U.S. lawmakers urging President Joe Biden to resign after 13 U.S. service members were killed in a terrorist attack in Afghanistan.
“I would say, first, this is a day where U.S. servicemembers—12 of them—lost their lives at the hands of terrorists. It’s not a day for politics,” Psaki said.
“We would expect that any American, whether they’re elected or not, would stand with us and our commitment to going after and fighting and killing those terrorists wherever they live, and to honoring the memory of service members and that’s what this day is for,” she added.
More than a dozen House and Senate Republicans called on Thursday for Biden to resign, though Psaki was only asked about “two Republican senators” in particular—likely Josh Hawley of Missouri and Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, who joined a wave of politicians pushing for the president to leave the Oval Office.
Blackburn issued a similar message on Thursday, blaming the Biden administration for having “no plan and no strategy,” putting Americans into direct harm and causing many casualties.
Other prominent GOP congresswomen, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Rep. Lauren Boebert, also urged the president to face impeachment or step down.
Former President Donald Trump, who has been critical of Biden’s handling of the situation in Afghanistan, issued a statement that offered condolences for the fallen service members and Afghans.
“Melania and I send our deepest condolences to the families of our brilliant Service Members whose duty to the U.S.A. meant so much to them,” Trump said. “Our thoughts are also with the families of the innocent civilians who died today in the savage Kabul attack.”
“This tragedy should have never been allowed to happen, which makes our grief even deeper and more difficult to understand,” he continued.
Biden said at the White House on Aug. 26 that the United States will strike back at ISIS and “hunt” down the terrorist group in retaliation to the Kabul bombings.
The president has already directed military officials to draw up plans to strike ISIS facilities and fighters. He said “ISIS terrorists will not win” and the United States will “not be intimidated.”