“No, that's complete nonsense,” Johnson told broadcasters when asked about allegations from a former Foreign Office official turned whistleblower that the prime minister had instructed staff in Kabul to “use considerable capacity” to evacuate dogs and cats from an animal shelter run by a former Royal Marine commando.
In a 40-page written statement to the parliamentary Foreign Affairs Select Committee, Raphael Marshall also claimed that the “chaotic” and “dysfunctional” evacuation, code-named Operation Pitting by the government, led to people being left to die at the hands of the Taliban, as only 5% of the thousands of applicants were rescued.
He also accused the then-foreign minister Dominic Raab of showing a misunderstanding of the haphazard process and desperate position at Kabul airport by delaying several emergency evacuation referrals.
In response to Marshall’s criticism, Johnson admitted that “sometimes decisions took hours longer than we want to,” but claimed that Operation Pitting, which saw 15,000 people airlifted from Kabul over the summer, “was one of the outstanding military achievements of the last 50 years or more.”