“Our priority now is to make sure this progress sticks,” Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said in a news conference in Kabul with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani. “That is why President Obama is considering a number of options to reinforce our support for President Ghani’s security strategy, including possible changes to the timeline for our drawdown of US troops.”
Under the current arrangement, the 11,000-strong US force should be cut to roughly 5,000 by the end of 2015, before pulling out altogether the following year, when Obama will leave office. By the end of 2016 the US military presence is expected to shrink to a “normal” embassy security contingent.
SecDef Carter speaks with troops at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. http://ift.tt/1Gg2bU3
— U.S. Dept of Defense (@DeptofDefense) February 21, 2015
Obama is scheduled to visit Kabul next month, where Ghani will likely discuss US troop numbers with the American leader “in the context of the larger partnership.”
The US commander on the ground, General John Campbell, has previously suggested slowing the drawdown further. But while traveling with Carter on Saturday, Campbell said that his focus for now was sustaining enough US trainers, advisors and counter-terrorism forces in Afghanistan.
“Right now I think we’re comfortable looking at '15 and '16,” Campbell told reporters.
SecDef Carter heard from President Ghani and other Afghan leaders about the progress of the ANSF. @ResoluteSupporthttp://ift.tt/1JxMxZD
— U.S. Dept of Defense (@DeptofDefense) February 21, 2015
Ghani, however, told CBS' 60 Minutes last month that Obama should reconsider the 2016 withdrawal deadline, citing security concerns.
“Deadlines concentrate the mind. But deadlines should not be dogmas,” Ghani said. “If both parties or, in this case, multiple partners, have done their best to achieve the objectives and progress is very real, then there should be willingness to re-examine a deadline.”
Paving the way for Ghani’s visit to US, Carter said that counterterrorism is “continuing preoccupation” of his unannounced trip to Kabul, while “rethinking the details of the counterterrorism mission and how the environment has changed [in Afghanistan]” is a priority for both countries.
READ MORE: Taliban not a terrorist group? White House official says it’s ‘armed insurgency’
With the rise of the influence of the Islamic State in the region and the pace at which they are attracting new recruits, Cambell for his part noted that some former Taliban commanders have already “rebranded” themselves as fighters for the Islamic State.
“You saw how fast this went in Iraq,” Campbell told reporters at a separate press conference, referring to the rise of recruits for the caliphate cause. “All of us don’t want that to happen here.”
Ghani, however, sounded positive about the prospects of peace talks with Taliban, saying the “grounds for peace have never been better in the last 36 years.”
Talks with the Taliban stalled after the US focused on withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan after America’s longest-ever overseas war, which began soon after 9/11. At the height of the US invasion of Afghanistan, some 130,000 US and NATO troops participated in the operation. Last year the mission wrapped up its combat operations against the insurgency. A contingent of over 11,000 US troops remained to train Afghanistan’s 350,000 soldiers and police.
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