The Palm Beach Post

Pentagon says Afghan troop boost to cost $1B

In hearings, defense secretary says Iran deal worth keeping.

- By Richard Lardner

The U.S. military’s top leaders told lawmakers Tuesday that the thousands of additional U.S. troops President Donald Trump has

ordered to Afghanista­n will

cost just over $1 billion a year,

bringing the total bill for fighting America’s longest war to $12.5 billion annually.

During wide-ranging hearings on Capitol Hill, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis also said that the United States should remain in the nuclear deal negotiated during the Obama administra­tion that constrains Iran’s ability to build a nuclear arsenal. Trump has trashed the internatio­nal accord, a cornerston­e of Barack Obama’s presidency, as the worst agreement ever negotiated by the United States and signaled he may abandon the agreement.

The release of the Afghan war cost informatio­n came as Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., assailed Mattis and Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, for withholdin­g from Congress key details about Trump’s new strategy for winning in Afghanista­n that was announced six weeks ago.

McCain, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, declared that it was “bizarre” that Mattis and Dunford did not submit written testimony before the hearing started. That’s customary practice for administra­tion witnesses testifying before congressio­nal committees.

“We want to be your partners,” McCain said. “But this committee will not be a rubber stamp for any policy or president. We must be well-informed. We must be convinced of the merits of the administra­tion’s actions. And unfortunat­ely, we still have far more questions than answers about this new strategy.”

Mattis and Dunford, who appeared first before the Senate panel and later before the House Armed Services Committee, sought to assure skep

tical lawmakers that Trump’s plan for expanding the U.S. presence in Afghanista­n would pay off. Several members expressed concern the U.S. was wading more deeply into a conflict at great expense without prospects for longterm success.

Mattis said that the Afghanista­n military and police forces are fully engaged in combat

operations for the first time during the 16-year-old war and are suffering fewer casualties as they continue to improve their competence on the battlefiel­d.

Dunford acknowledg­ed, however, that the war in Afghanista­n is currently a stalemate.

“We’re not at a point where we can bring a successful political solution to the war,” Dunford said.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Defense Secretary Jim Mattis (left), and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Joseph Dunford (right) speak Tuesday with Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., as they arrive to testify on Afghanista­n before the Senate Armed Services Committee in Washington.
ANDREW HARNIK / ASSOCIATED PRESS Defense Secretary Jim Mattis (left), and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Joseph Dunford (right) speak Tuesday with Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., as they arrive to testify on Afghanista­n before the Senate Armed Services Committee in Washington.

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