The Columbus Dispatch

Experts help Trump devise a decent war strategy

- JAY AMBROSE Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service. Email him at speaktojay@ aol. com.

Give him a teleprompt­er, and President Donald Trump comes across as dignified. He is substantiv­e and he makes sense, as in resurrecti­ng an exit strategy from war that had all but been forgotten. It is called victory.

His predecesso­r would put up with no such notion and, in Afghanista­n, launched new tactics while setting a date for our withdrawal. That meant the Taliban enemy could trot around killing as the itch occurred and waiting for the happy day. President Barack Obama finally gave up on that stupidity, tried out others plans and still saw the war drag on longer than any other in our history — 16 years at this point.

During his campaign and early in his presidency, Trump wanted to yank all the U. S. soldiers out and say good riddance to a seeming misadventu­re that has cost us some 2,500 American lives and $ 1 trillion. Even with 100,000 troops there a few years back, compared with 8,500 today, we achieved little, he knew, and yet he listened. His generals made contrary arguments, and, as he said in a nationally televised speech Monday, the day of the solar eclipse, he changed his mind.

The points he made were good ones.

For one thing, we will be fighting a war, not trying the hopeless task of nation building, and we will be doing so in our own self-interest. Afghanista­n is where alQaida plotted and organized the 9/11 assault. It now harbors some 20 different terrorist groups that would love nothing better than having all of us dead. To take off with the Taliban primed for more power would be to invite more plots and more assaults here and around the world.

This war will be fought with might, no equivocati­on and no surcease of Taliban sorrow. Rules of engagement? Some extra precaution­s were long ago taken to safeguard civilians and win their support but, when stretched too far, the rules can endanger our own troops and curb their effectiven­ess. Trump is ordering that they be revised.

We’re going to get tough with Pakistan. A major disadvanta­ge for us has been that our terrorist enemies can obtain safe havens there, and Trump is saying "no more." This will entail some difficult, tricky maneuvers, but we’re capable of that. We’re also going to ask India for more help, expect more assistance from our European allies and look to the Afghan government to deal with its corruption.

In what seemed to contradict his talk about our self- interest, Trump also suggested we won’t be sticking around if Afghanista­n does not do its bit in the war, but the nudge may be needed if we are to succeed.

Critics of all of this were quick to have at Trump for not providing enough details, such as how many more troops he would send Afghanista­n’s way. I hereby give them grade deductions for not paying attention. Repeating a constant thesis of his, Trump made it clear he is not going to provide our enemies a counterstr­ategy by giving them the details of ours. Might politics have been part of his reticence? Yes. Politics is how Washington works.

The extra bit of good news here is that Trump did not sound like an ego freak romping around crazily. He was under control, and it was clear, too, that he would not conduct war as an Obama-style, micromanag­ing second-guesser, disregardi­ng, for instance, expert advice that it was necessary to keep troops in Iraq to safeguard it from terrorist ambitions. Trump seems to get it that war is war and that, if you forget as much, you make it even worse.

When Trump ad libs, as in a press conference where a reporter shrieks about a white supremacis­t, and says alt- right protests were answered in kind, he often loses and loses big. It has been adding up to the point of a presidency in deep trouble. Rectificat­ion resides with heeding the wisdom of others, controllin­g impulses, having good writers lend a hand and using teleprompt­ers as necessary.

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