The Borneo Post

Trump weighs further US troops for Afghanista­n

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WASHINGTON: Hanging in a corridor outside the Pentagon press office, a blow-up of a Time magazine cover shows a weary US soldier drawing deeply on his cigarette. Barbed wire and snowy foothills loom behind him.

The headline: ‘How Not to Lose in Afghanista­n.’ The date: April 20, 2009.

More than eight years later, the Pentagon finds itself in the same quandary. Again. This time round, it is President Donald Trump looking for answers, just as Barack Obama and George W Bush did before him.

Having given Afghanista­n little more than a passing mention as president, he is now being forced to confront the issue by a grim drumbeat of bad news and warnings from his generals.

Almost any year from its turbulent recent past can serve as a showcase for Afghanista­n’s dire predicamen­t.

Take 2016, which marked 15 years since the US-led invasion. Nearly 11,500 Afghan civilians were killed or wounded, according to the United Nations.

Adding to the carnage, local officials say, the Taliban and other insurgent groups killed about 7,000 Afghan security force members – many of whom had been trained and supported by US and Nato experts.

Dan Coats, Trump’s director of national intelligen­ce, hammered home the depressing point this week, warning that the political and security situation will “almost certainly” continue to worsen. — AFP

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