Trump Has Made Afghanistan Decision After ‘Rigorous’ Review: Mattis
The White House said President Donald Trump will lay out the strategy for the war in Afghanistan in a television address on Monday night.
President Donald Trump has a made a decision on the
United States’ strategy for Afghanistan after a “sufficiently rigorous”
review process, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on Sunday.
However,
Mattis did not provide details on when the White House would make an
announcement or what the decision was on Afghanistan, where fighting
still rages more than 15 years after U.S. forces invaded and overthrew a
Taliban government.
Soon
after taking office in January, the Trump administration began a review
of U.S. policy on Afghanistan, which has expanded into a broader South
Asia review.
“I
am very comfortable that the strategic process was sufficiently
rigorous and did not go in with a pre-set position,” Mattis told
reporters traveling with him aboard a military aircraft to Jordan. “The
president has made a decision. As he said, he wants to be the one to
announce it to the American people.”
After
Trump met with his national security aides on Friday to review an array
of options for Afghan strategy, the White House said no decision had
been made on whether he would commit more troops to America’s longest
war. However, Trump tweeted on Saturday: “many decisions made, including
on Afghanistan.”
U.S.
officials have told Reuters that the president was expected to be
briefed on options ranging from a complete withdrawal of U.S. troops in
Afghanistan to a modest increase.
One
U.S. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Trump’s top
national security aides are backing adding between 3,000 and 5,000
troops and allowing them to embed with Afghan forces closer to combat.
Democratic
U.S. Senator Tim Kaine said lawmakers were waiting for the Trump
administration to articulate its strategy on Afghanistan before making a
judgment on troops.
“The
troop strength question is sort of cart before the horse,” Kaine told
CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “The real question is what is our
strategy? And then when you lay out the strategy, the troop strength
question can kind of answer itself.”
Michael
Kugelman, with the Woodrow Wilson Center think tank in Washington, said
an extended strategy review was somewhat positive because it showed
that all options were being considered. However, recent gains by Taliban
militants made it imperative that a strategy be announced soon.
According
to U.S. estimates, government forces control less than 60 percent of
Afghanistan, with almost half the country either contested or under the
control of the insurgents.
“The
Taliban insurgency has never been stronger... We need a strategy to
address all this, and fast,” Kugelman said. (Reporting by Idrees Ali;
Additional reporting by Doina Chiacu in Washington; editing by David
Stamp and Nick Zieminski)
No comments:
Post a Comment