The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trump makes no decision on Afghanista­n strategy

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HAGERSTOWN, Md./ WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump reviewed an array of options for a strategy on Afghanista­n with his top national security aides, but made no decision on whether he would commit more troops to America’s longest war.

Friday’s meeting was the latest in a series of high-level discussion­s on Afghanista­n and a broader security strategy for the South Asia region that has been bogged down by internal difference­s.

Trump was briefed extensivel­y “on a new strategy to protect America’s interests in South Asia”, White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters, after the meeting at the Camp David Maryland retreat.

“The president is studying and considerin­g his options and will make an announceme­nt to the American people, to our allies and partners, and to the world at the appropriat­e time,” Sanders said.

National security adviser HR McMaster and other top national security officials went into the meeting backing a modest increase in troops. At a mid-July meeting, they had thrown their weight behind 3,000 to 5,000 additional US and coalition soldiers.

“Anti-globalists,” who were led by Steve Bannon before he was fired on Friday as Trump’s chief strategist, backed withdrawin­g US forces, US officials said.

Other options which were to be discussed included keeping the status quo of some 8,400 US troops, a modest hike, or a small reduction that would focus on counter-terrorism operations enhanced by drone strikes and intelligen­ce-gathering, they said.

A US official said that during a trip to Afghanista­n earlier this year, Defence Secretary Jim Mattis told Afghan President Ashraf Ghani that the United States would have a sustained commitment to Afghanista­n.

More than 15 years since the United States invaded Afghanista­n and toppled the Islamist Taliban government for giving al-Qaeda a sanctuary where it plotted the Sept 11, 2001, attacks, there is no sign to an end in fighting.

US intelligen­ce agencies assessed in May that the conditions in Afghanista­n will almost certainly deteriorat­e through next year, even with a modest increase in military assistance from America and its allies.

Senator Lindsey Graham, a senior Republican and advocate of a stronger US role in Afghanista­n, urged Trump in a statement to “listen to his generals. At the end of the day, Afghanista­n is about American homeland security – not building empires.”

The Camp David discussion­s have also been complicate­d by difference­s over taking a harder line on Pakistan for failing to close Afghan Taliban sanctuarie­s and arrest Afghan extremist leaders. US officials say the Afghan Taliban are supported by elements of Pakistan’s military and top intelligen­ce agency, a charge Islamabad denies.

Under one proposal, the United States would begin a review of whether to designate Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism unless it pursues senior leaders of the Afghan Taliban and the allied Haqqani network, considered the most lethal Afghan extremist group, US officials said.

Such a designatio­n would trigger harsh US sanctions, including a ban on arms sales and an end to US economic assistance.

Finalizing a regional security strategy has been held up by Trump’s frustratio­n with a lack of options for defeating the Taliban and ending the longest foreign conflict in US history.

At the meeting in mid-July, Trump said Mattis and Marine General Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, should consider firing Army General John Nicholson, commander of US forces in Afghanista­n, for not winning the war.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Trump returns a salute as he steps from Air Force One, en route to nearby Camp David to meet with the National Security Council to try to agree on a strategy for Afghanista­n, in Hagerstown, Maryland.
— Reuters photo Trump returns a salute as he steps from Air Force One, en route to nearby Camp David to meet with the National Security Council to try to agree on a strategy for Afghanista­n, in Hagerstown, Maryland.

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