LONDON: Britain on Friday slammed the US troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, warning the Taliban's resurgence would create a breeding ground for extremists that threatened the world.
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace on Thursday announced that some 600 troops would help evacuate British nationals from the country, as the militants seize more control.
But he told Sky News television the US decision to withdraw troops "leaves a very big problem on the ground", handing momentum to the Taliban.
He predicted it would benefit Al-Qaeda, who were given safe haven by the Taliban before the September 11, 2001 attacks that prompted the West's 20-year involvement in Afghanistan.
Taliban near gates of Kabul as embassies prepare for evacuations
"I'm absolutely worried that failed states are breeding grounds for those type of people," he added.
"Of course Al-Qaeda will probably come back," he said, warning that would lead to "a security threat to us and our interests."
"I felt that that was a mistake to have done it that way, that we'll all as an international community probably pay the consequences of that," Wallace said of the Doha agreement signed between the United States and the Taliban.
The agreement, signed under former US president Donald Trump last year, left Britain with no choice but to withdraw its troops, he said.
The 600 British troops being sent to Afghanistan to help with repatriation is close to the 750 Britain had in the country before the withdrawal.
They will help up to 3,000 British nationals leave, Wallace said.
The minister's critical comments about the withdrawal were among several from senior politicians and military top brass.
'Total betrayal'
The chairman of the influential Foreign Affairs Select Committee in parliament, Tom Tugendhat, told the BBC: "We've just pulled the rug from under them," referring to the Afghan people.
The Conservative MP added that Britain's need to send in more troops to facilitate its withdrawal was "a sure sign of failure".
Taliban control 65% of Afghanistan, EU official says, after series of sudden gains
Former international development minister Rory Stewart called the troop withdrawal "a total betrayal by the US and by the UK" that risked triggering a civil war between rival warlords currently defending against the Taliban.
Johnny Mercer, a Conservative MP and former veterans minister who served in Afghanistan, called the withdrawal "a disgrace".
"I think it's humiliating for the UK military, for the families who lost individuals over there but above all it's a huge tragedy for the people of Afghanistan, who've been through so much over so many years," he told Times Radio.
"We've chosen this defeat and it's shameful."
The leader of Northern Ireland's Ulster Unionist Party, Doug Beattie, served three tours in Afghanistan with the British Army, said ordinary Afghans would pay the price.
"We raised the expectations of the Afghan people that we would create something better for them," he told Irish state broadcaster RTE.
"And we're going to dash it by our inactivity... We have made strategic failures, and the latest one is to leave Afghanistan as quickly as we have and without a political settlement."