The Palm Beach Post

Afghanista­n troop increase being mulled

Up to 1,000 might help battle Taliban in fighting season.

- By Greg Jaffe and Missy Ryan Washington Post

The U.S. Army is readying plans that could increase the total force in Afghanista­n by as many as 1,000 U.S. troops this spring beyond the 14,000 already in the country, senior military officials said.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis has not signed off on the proposals for the new forces, which are part of a broader strategy to bolster Afghan forces so that they can pound the Taliban during the upcoming fighting season.

The possible increases have the support of the Army’s senior leadership, which has been working to determine the mix of troops required to execute a strategy centered on a new combat formation.

The discussion­s at the Pentagon underscore the complex task the U.S. military faces as it prepares to deploy newly created combat advisory teams to some of the most violent, remote and heavily contested areas of Afghanista­n.

The Obama administra­tion, as part of its plan to wind down the Afghanista­n war in 2015, limited advisers to higher headquarte­rs far from the fighting. The new strategy that President Donald Trump approved in August would push U.S. advisory teams to the battalion level, far closer to the front lines.

“This is a concept that got accelerate­d for Afghanista­n, and it has been quite a process,” a senior military official said of the plan to send the U.S. Army’s firstever Security Force Assistance Brigade to Afghanista­n early this spring. “It has been a roller coaster.”

The official, who is involved in the troop planning, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss military planning.

Military officials said that some troops, particular­ly at the headquarte­rs level, might come out of Afghanista­n as new forces move into the theater and that they expect the total force this spring to be about 15,000 troops.

Trump’s plan for the war increased the number of troops from 8,500 when he took office to about 14,000 today. The president also lifted restrictio­ns on U.S. warplanes, triggering a major spike this winter in airstrikes aimed at Taliban formations and leadership.

A spokesman for Gen. John W. Nicholson Jr., the top U.S. commander in Afghanista­n, said U.S. Forces Afghanista­n had not specifical­ly asked for an increase in troop levels, suggesting the increase, if approved, would be considered an adjustment under the current plan rather than an increase associated with a shift in strategy.

The White House might want to weigh in on any plan to send additional troops to Afghanista­n, according to U.S. officials.

Even as he signed off on the new war strategy, Trump has expressed misgivings about sending more resources into a conflict that has been grinding on with few signs of progress.

Senior administra­tion officials said that the president has been known to affect an Indian accent and imitate Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who in an Oval Office meeting last year told him, “Never has a country given so much away for so little in return” as the United States in Afghanista­n.

To Trump, Modi’s statement was proof that the rest of the world viewed the United States as being duped and taken advantage of in Afghanista­n, these officials said.

Despite those misgivings, Trump has largely left execution of the war plan to the Pentagon, with little of the intense oversight that occurred during the Obama administra­tion. At the time, Pentagon officials viewed the restrictio­ns put on the campaign by the Obama White House as micromanag­ement.

But Trump has made it clear to senior Pentagon officials that he wants to see a quick return on the increased U.S. investment in troops and money in Afghanista­n. Pentagon officials also are under pressure to keep troop numbers from growing significan­tly.

Nicholson said in the fall that the additional U.S. advisers and firepower will allow Afghan military and police forces to take control of 80 percent of the country in the next two years. Currently, the Afghan government controls about two-thirds of the country, with most of the rest controlled by the Taliban or contested.

The combinatio­n of the White House’s insistence on quick progress and a desire to have the Afghan army take the lead in the fight has led to a sometimes heated debate inside the military over how best to support the Afghan forces. At the core of the debate is the Army’s new Security Force Assistance Brigade, a concept that was developed under the direction of Gen. Mark A. Milley, the Army’s top general in the Pentagon. Unlike a traditiona­l brigade, the unit does not come with any junior enlisted soldiers or junior officers and is broken up into 36 teams, each consisting of 12 soldiers, that can be parceled out among the forces they are advising.

The new unit is the product of lessons from the long insurgent conflicts following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, when the U.S. military has struggled to build cohesive and effective indigenous forces at a reasonable cost in places such as Iraq and Afghanista­n.

“This is a test of the whole principle,” retired Lt. Gen. David Barno, a former U.S. commander in Afghanista­n, said of the brigade’s upcoming deployment. The driving theory behind the new units is that specially trained advisers can mentor and assist foreign forces more effectivel­y than regular combat forces.

Under the previous model, “it was always the first day of school” for regular soldiers showing up in Afghanista­n to serve as advisers, Barno said.

The concept has drawn mixed reviews from the Army, which has long resisted the concept of advisory brigades that some Army officials worry are being built at the expense of more traditiona­l brigades and will bleed combat power from the larger Army force.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP ?? Defense Secretary James Mattis has not yet signed off on more Afghanista­n troops.
JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP Defense Secretary James Mattis has not yet signed off on more Afghanista­n troops.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States