Vancouver Sun

MORE TROOPS FROM TRUMP

Boost for fight in Afghanista­n

- LOLITA C. BALDOR AND MATTHEW PENNINGTON

WASHINGTON • President Donald Trump’s plan to end the stalemate in America’s longest war and eliminate Afghanista­n’s rising extremist threat involves sending up to 3,900 additional U.S. forces, senior officials said Tuesday. The first deployment­s could take place within days.

In a national address Monday night, Trump reversed his past calls for a speedy exit and recommitte­d the U.S. to the 16-year conflict, saying U.S. troops must “fight to win.” He warned against the mistakes made in Iraq, where an American military withdrawal led to a vacuum that the Islamic State group quickly filled.

Trump would not confirm how many more service members he plans to send to Afghanista­n, which may be the public’s most pressing question about his strategy. In interviews with television networks Tuesday, Vice-President Mike Pence similarly wouldn’t give any clear answer. Instead, he cited Pentagon plans from June calling for 3,900 more troops.

“The troop levels are significan­t, and we’ll listen to our military commanders about that,” Pence said. “And the president will make that decision in the days ahead.”

U.S. officials said there was no fixed number. But they said the Pentagon has told Trump it needs that many fresh forces in addition to the roughly 8,400 Americans in the country to accomplish Trump’s objectives of “obliterati­ng ISIS, crushing al-Qaida, preventing the Taliban from taking over Afghanista­n and stopping mass terror attacks against America before they emerge.”

The 3,900 figure includes a combinatio­n of trainers, security forces and other support troops, according to the officials, who weren’t authorized to publicly discuss details about the military planning and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Before he was a presidenti­al candidate, Trump ardently argued for a quick withdrawal from Afghanista­n and called the war a massive waste of U.S. “blood and treasure.” On Monday, he suggested an open-ended commitment rather than a “time-based” approach.

“Conditions on the ground — not arbitrary timetables — will guide our strategy from now on,” Trump said.

At its peak involvemen­t in 2010-2011, the U.S. had roughly 100,000 troops in Afghanista­n. President Barack Obama then started bringing them home, drawing criticism for the advance timetables he provided.

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