The Star Malaysia

Trump’s plan in Afghanista­n murky

The US president did not offer the middle eastern nation a ‘blank cheque’ but gave no specific timetable for the end of an American commitment that has already lasted 16 years.

- By JULIE PACE and KEN THOMAS

PRESIDENT Donald Trump is vowing to win what has seemed to be an unwinnable war.

How he plans to do so is still murky despite the months of internal deliberati­ons that ultimately persuaded Trump to stick with a conflict he has long opposed.

In a 26-minute address to the nation last week, Trump alluded to more American troops deploying to Afghanista­n, but refused to say how many. He said victory would be well-defined, but outlined only vague benchmarks for success, like dismantlin­g al-Qaeda and preventing the Taliban from taking over Afghanista­n. He said the US would not offer Afghanista­n a “blank cheque,” but provided no specific timetable for the end of an American commitment that has already lasted 16 years.

Instead, Trump projected an “I got this” bravado that has become a hallmark of his presidency.

“In the end, we will win,” he declared of America’s longest war.

Victory in Afghanista­n has eluded Trump’s predecesso­rs: President George W. Bush, who launched the war after the Sept 11, 2001 attacks, and President Barack Obama, who surged US troop levels to 100,000, but ultimately failed in fulfilling his promise to bring the conflict to a close before leaving office.

As Trump now takes his turn at the helm, he faces many of the same challenges that have bedevilled those previous presidents and left some US officials deeply uncertain about whether victory is indeed possible.

Afghanista­n remains one of the world’s poorest countries and corruption is embedded in its politics. The Taliban is resurgent. And Afghan forces remain too weak to secure the country without American help.

“When we had 100,000 US troops in Afghanista­n, we couldn’t secure the whole country,” said Ben Rhodes, who served as Obama’s deputy national security adviser.

Trump offered up many of the same solutions tried by his predecesso­rs. He vowed to get tough on neighbouri­ng Pakistan, to push for reforms in Afghanista­n and to moderate ambitions. The US will not be caught in the quagmire of democracy-building abroad, he said, promising a “principled realism” focused only on US interests would guide his decisions.

Obama promised much of the same.

By simply sticking with the Afghan conflict, Trump’s plan amounts to a victory for the military men increasing­ly filling Trump’s inner circle and a stinging defeat for the nationalis­t supporters who saw in Trump a like-minded skeptic of US interventi­on in long and costly overseas conflicts. Chief among them is ousted adviser Steve Bannon, whose website Breitbart News blared criticism Monday of the establishm­ent’s approach to running he war.

After Trump’s speech, one headline on the website read: “UNLIMITED WAR.” Another said: “What Does Victory in Afghanista­n Look Like? Washington Doesn’t Know.”

Now Trump leads Washington and that question falls for him to answer. As a candidate, he energised millions of war-weary voters with an “America First” mantra and now faces the challenges of explaining how that message translates to US involvemen­t in a war across the globe, likely for years to come.

In a rare moment of public selfreflec­tion, Trump acknowledg­ed that his position on Afghanista­n had changed since taking office and sought to sway his supporters who would normally oppose a continuati­on of the war.

“My original instinct was to pull out,” Trump said. “But all my life I’ve heard that decisions are much different when you sit behind the desk in the Oval Office, in other words, when you’re president of the United States.”

Trump pointed to “three fundamenta­l conclusion­s” about US interests in Afghanista­n - all of which appeal to patriotism and nationalis­tic pride.

The president said the nation needs to seek “an honourable and enduring outcome worthy of the tremendous sacrifices” made by US soldiers – a line that harkened back to promises made by Richard Nixon during the 1968 campaign to bring “an honourable end” to the war in Vietnam.

Trump also warned that a rapid exit would create a vacuum that terrorists like the Islamic State group and al-Qaeda would fill, leading to conditions similar to before the Sept 11, 2001, attacks. And he noted that the security threats in Afghanista­n are “immense”, and made the case that it is key to protecting the United States.

The US currently has about 8,400 troops in Afghanista­n. Pentagon officials proposed plans to send in nearly 4,000 more to boost training and advising of the Afghan forces and bolster counter-terrorism operations against the Taliban and an Islamic State group affiliate trying to gain a foothold in the country.

To those US service members, Trump promised nothing short of success.

“The men and women who serve our nation in combat deserve a plan for victory,” he said. “They deserve the tools they need and the trust they have earned to fight and to win.” — AP

 ??  ?? Dangerous
situation: US forces leaving after a suicide attack followed by a clash between Afghan forces and IS fighters during an attack on the Iraqi embassy in Kabul. —AP
Dangerous situation: US forces leaving after a suicide attack followed by a clash between Afghan forces and IS fighters during an attack on the Iraqi embassy in Kabul. —AP

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