Bangkok Post

BOUNTIES UPROAR DIMS TRUMP FOREIGN POLICY SUCCESS

US pulling out of Afghanista­n as planned when new scandal comes along.

- By Michael Crowley

For a president with few tangible foreign policy accomplish­ments under his belt, Afghanista­n had come to look something like a bright spot. His nuclear talks with North Korea have proved fruitless; his “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran has produced no concession­s from Tehran; Palestinia­ns declared his Middle East peace plan dead on arrival; and a trade deal with China looks more unlikely every day.

But while President Donald Trump has not achieved his goal of a full US withdrawal from Afghanista­n, he has drawn down thousands of US troops and struck a deal with the Taliban intended to pave the way for a complete exit and an end to the 19-year conflict.

Now the uproar over US intelligen­ce showing that Russia paid bounties for the killings of US troops in Afghanista­n is renewing focus on a conflict that had drifted to the political back burner and turning what had been a qualified success story for the president into at least a short-term political disaster.

What remains to be seen is whether, and how, the episode might affect Mr Trump’s future plans. The military recently finished drawing down troops in Afghanista­n from about 14,000 last February to roughly 8,600. That is the minimum level that military commanders say allows them to prevent the Taliban and other radical fighters from overrunnin­g the shaky, US-backed Afghan government in Kabul.

But with the November election coming, military officials say they are braced for Mr Trump to announce at any time his intention to pull thousands more troops from the country before then.

One person familiar with the president’s thinking said he had repeatedly spoken of having all US soldiers out of the country by the end of the year. That prospect may become even more likely now that the United States’ continuing presence in Afghanista­n has badly stung a president who lost patience with the US mission there long ago but for years has found himself pressured to stay by congressio­nal and military leaders invoking the spectre of another attack in the mould of Sept 11.

The debate over what Trump officials knew about the intelligen­ce on Russian bounties and when is “ignoring the bigger picture here”, said Dan Caldwell, senior adviser of Concerned Veterans for America, a conservati­ve group that opposes US troop deployment­s overseas. “The bigger problem,” he added, “is that by leaving our troops not only in places like Afghanista­n but also in Iraq and Syria, we make it easier for our adversarie­s like Russia, Iran and nonstate actors like al-Qaeda to bleed us on the cheap.”

Mr Trump has called stories about the bounties “a made-up Fake News Media Hoax” and studiously avoided commenting on the substance of the intelligen­ce, including how it could change his policies toward either Russia or Afghanista­n. But however willing he may be to overlook or downplay Russian aggression worldwide as he seeks to thaw relations with Moscow, it seems likely that the political grief he has suffered will only fuel his desire to withdraw troops from the country.

Mr Trump’s patience with the conflict has been steadily waning in recent months, and he was particular­ly angry after two US soldiers were killed when a member of Afghanista­n’s security forces opened fire on US troops during a joint patrol in early February. Days later, Mr

Trump, who has often remarked on the burden of writing military condolence letters, travelled to Dover Air Force Base to witness the return of the soldiers’ remains, a sombre nighttime ceremony chillingly punctured by a widow’s desperate screams.

The recently published book by Mr Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton confirms what has become increasing­ly obvious. Mr Bolton recounts numerous instances when Mr Trump, making liberal use of expletives, asked his exasperate­d advisers when he could be finished with the country. “We’ve got to get out of there,” Mr Bolton recalls Mr Trump saying in March 2019.

Mr Trump took a key step in that direction on Feb 29, when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and a Taliban leader signed an agreement in Qatar under which the US would begin a phased troop withdrawal in exchange for a halt in Taliban attacks on US forces and the beginning of political talks between the insurgent group and the Afghan government.

The signing came just days after officials say intelligen­ce about the Russian bounties appeared in Mr Trump’s daily intelligen­ce briefing. Some Trump officials were concerned the intelligen­ce could jeopardise the Taliban deal. Whether for that reason or others, officials say Mr Trump was not verbally briefed about it at the time.

That agreement has been plagued with setbacks, including an unwelcome increase in Taliban attacks on Afghan targets, an exchange of prisoners between the Taliban and the Afghan government that has taken months longer than expected, and an Afghan election with disputed results that paralysed the country’s government.

In one sign that Mr Trump is determined to press ahead, Mr Pompeo spoke on Monday to the Taliban’s deputy and chief negotiator, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, “to discuss implementa­tion of the US-Taliban agreement,” the State Department said.

“Certainly there’s a political resonance for the notion that, after all these years, President Trump will end the war that other presidents were unwilling to end,” said Richard Fontaine, chief executive officer of the Center for a New American Security, a Washington-based policy group.

Mr Fontaine cautions against a withdrawal of troops, reminiscen­t of the US exit from Iraq in 2011, that could allow militants to rampage and terrorists to find safe haven as al-Qaeda did in Afghanista­n before the Sept 11 attacks.

For now, that view has significan­t support in Congress. On Wednesday, the House Armed Services Committee voted 45-11 to approve a bipartisan amendment to an annual defence authorisat­ion bill that would restrict funds for a withdrawal of US troops from Afghanista­n below the level of 8,000.

One of the amendment’s co-sponsors, Rep Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the third-ranking House Republican, warned that “the US-Taliban deal allows for premature troop withdrawal that is not conditions-based”.

A Senate effort from the opposite perspectiv­e met a swift rebuke the same day. Republican senator Rand Paul, one of Congress’ leading non-interventi­onist voices, co-sponsored an amendment with Democrat senator Tom Udall, to withdraw all US troops from Afghanista­n within a year. The Senate voted 60-33 to table the amendment.

 ??  ?? HAIL TO THE CHIEF: American troops applaud as President Donald Trump speaks at Bagram Air Base outside Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Nov 28, 2019.
HAIL TO THE CHIEF: American troops applaud as President Donald Trump speaks at Bagram Air Base outside Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Nov 28, 2019.

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