The Palm Beach Post

Top U.S. commander wants more aggressive Afghan push

- By Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON — The top American commander for the Middle East wants a more aggressive Afghan military pressuring Taliban and other insurgents over the normally quieter months of Afghanista­n’s winter, and then quickly going on the offensive in the spring. It’s all part of a plan the United States hopes will change the course of a war now entering its 17th year.

Gen. Joseph Votel of U.S. Central Command said an influx of new American trainers can help escalate the fight. They’ll be operating with Afghan units, closer to the front lines and at greater risk, but Votel said U.S. commanders will ensure American and allied forces have adequate protection.

The goal is to get the Afghan military moving on its military campaign sooner, rather than later.

The United States wants the “focus on offensive operations and we’ll look for a major effort to gain the initiative very quickly as we enter into the fighting season,” Votel said in a recent interview with The Associated Press.

Afghan forces must “keep the pressure on all the time and work to gain the upper hand as quickly as we can. So that as we get into this next fighting season we can build on the initiative,” he said.

The Trump administra­tion’s Afghanista­n strategy gives the U.S. military greater authority to launch offensive attacks against a resilient Taliban and an emerging Islamic State affiliate. The plan, announced in August, was designed to reverse a stalemate in America’s longest war. It specifical­ly eliminates the Obama administra­tion’s scheduled plan to withdraw U.S. forces, but includes no dramatic changes in an approach that has failed to stabilize the country or snuff out extremist groups operating from Afghan territory.

As 2018 begins, Afghanista­n appears to be high on President Donald Trump’s agenda. On New Year’s Day, he slammed Afghanista­n’s neighbor Pakistan in a tweet for “lies & deceit,” accusing the country of playing U.S. leaders for “fools” by not crushing militants in its territory. A major focus of Trump’s Afghanista­n strategy is to persuade Pakistan to eliminate havens for the Taliban and other fighters.

Pakistan summoned the U.S. ambassador and Islamic groups held rallies in major Pakistani cities in response.

“Pakistan has played a double game for years,” Nikki Haley, Trump’s U.N. envoy, said Tuesday, explaining that Washington was withholdin­g $255 million in aid to Islamabad. “They work with us at times and they also harbor the terrorists that attack our troops in Afghanista­n. That game is not acceptable.”

On the Afghan side of the border, Washington is trying to build a tougher national military.

Votel said as the coalition builds up the Afghan Air Force and trains more security forces, the Afghans will become better fighters. “By the time they get to the next fight,” he said, “they will be able to really present a significan­t offensive capability.”

But it’s hardly the first time the American military has vowed to shape up the U.S.backed army into a force that can defeat the Taliban, al-Qaida, IS and others. Nor does Trump’s approach represent the first time a frustrated president has pumped troops into the country to turn the situation around. There are now as many as 16,000 U.S. forces in the country — roughly double what Trump inherited — and a special training unit is scheduled to deploy to Afghanista­n early this year.

When then-President Barack Obama took office in 2009, he authorized a surge of U.S. forces to Afghanista­n that took the total there to about 100,000. The goal was to tamp down a resurgent Taliban and train and expand Afghan security forces.

 ?? MOHAMMAD ANWAR DANISHYAR / AP ?? Afghan security forces inspect the site of a bombing in Jalalabad province, east of Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Sunday. At least 15 people were killed and more than a dozen others wounded.
MOHAMMAD ANWAR DANISHYAR / AP Afghan security forces inspect the site of a bombing in Jalalabad province, east of Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Sunday. At least 15 people were killed and more than a dozen others wounded.

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