The Mercury News

Trump’s huddle on Afghanista­n ends with no decisions

- By Nick Wadhams

President Donald Trump said decisions have been made, but none have been announced so far on the future U.S. role in Afghanista­n following an hours-long retreat Friday at Camp David.

More than a dozen members of the president’s defense and foreign policy teams made the case at the meeting to continue fighting a war Trump has long questioned.

“This afternoon the president was briefed extensivel­y by his national security team on a new strategy to protect America’s interests in South Asia,” according to a White House statement Friday. “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.”

On Twitter on Saturday, the president said without elaboratin­g that many decisions had been made, “including on Afghanista­n” after an “important day spent at Camp David with our talented Generals and military leaders.”

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster back a proposal to add troops focused on training Afghan special forces. It’s intended to show a U.S. commitment to stay in the country, prod Taliban fighters to the negotiatin­g table and stem the increased presence of terrorist groups including Islamic State, according to people familiar with the plan who asked not to be identified discussing internal deliberati­ons.

The main obstacle to that plan may be Trump: Venting his frustratio­n with the stalemate in Afghanista­n, America’s longest war, the president said at a White House luncheon on July 18, that “I want to find out why we’ve been there for 17 years.”

He’s the third U.S. president struggling to stabilize Afghanista­n since George W. Bush sent special forces to help oust the Taliban government for harboring Osama bin Laden after the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks.

Trump’s unhappines­s over his options for Afghanista­n helped fuel interest by some at the White House in a plan floated by Erik Prince, the founder and former chief of the Blackwater security firm, who’s proposed contractin­g out much of the effort. He pledged it’d save billions of dollars and indicated he’d like to bid on the job. But the people familiar with the deliberati­ons suggested Prince’s idea has lost favor.

In addition to Trump’s top defense and national security advisers, those listed by the White House as attending the lunch and meeting at Camp David, the presidenti­al retreat in rural Maryland, included Vice President Mike Pence, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and budget director Mick Mulvaney.

The plan backed by “my generals,” as Trump has called top military officials, would seek to apply lessons learned from the campaign against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, while bolstering the capabiliti­es of Afghanista­n’s paramilita­ry troops. The U.S. would expand its close air support, providing cover for troops that the nascent Afghan air force can’t yet guarantee, and give commanders on the ground more authority over how troops are used.

The move, which would bring U.S. troop levels to about 13,000, would be an extension of an order that Trump gave in June granting Mattis authority to determine troop levels, essentiall­y lifting force limits imposed during the Obama administra­tion. Mattis has said he won’t exercise that authority until there’s an approved strategy.

Faced with Trump’s concern that the Afghanista­n war can’t ever be won, those who urge a renewed effort warn the departure of the U.S. and its allies would create opportunit­ies for forces opposed to American interests, including Islamic State, Iran and Russia.

Officials say Trump wasn’t happy with ideas presented to him in June, demanding more options. That put Mattis in an awkward spot: He told the Senate Armed Services Committee in June that he’d have a plan by July.

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