Pakistan has surprised many American officials, and there are fears that the Islamic State could gain a foothold in the Afghan conflict, the report said.
Ghani has repeatedly raised the specter of the Islamic State in comments ahead of his trip to Washington and during his visit.In a news conference on Tuesday, Obama pledged to continue to conduct targeted counterterrorism operations in Afghanistan. But he stressed the need for “flexibility” on troop levels as a way to maintain the overall security posture of Afghan forces in the country.
“This flexibility reflects our reinvigorated partnership with Afghanistan, which is aimed at making Afghanistan secure,” Obama said, adding later that “we want to make sure that we’re doing everything we can to help Afghan security forces succeed.”
The administration’s original plan envisioned that by 2015, Afghan special forces would largely take on the role that American-led special operations troops have played in the war: targeting Qaeda operatives and carrying out raids aimed at eliminating Taliban field commanders. But the elite Afghan soldiers remain heavily reliant on their American counterparts, although they are considered far better than Afghanistan’s conventional troops.
They have only limited airlift capabilities, a serious deficiency in a country as mountainous as Afghanistan and they do not have the high-end intelligence-collecting technology of the American forces, the report said. The Afghans also do not have armed drones, which have been used with increasing frequency in recent years in Afghanistan against Qaeda and Taliban targets, it said, adding that the drones flown in Afghanistan are operated by the American military; the ones used across the border in Pakistan are operated by the CIA.
The base in Jalalabad is also a hub for the collection of intelligence on Qaeda operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan; it was, for instance, the base from which American forces carried out the 2011 raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, the report said. Obama’s decision on the troop levels came after a direct entreaty from Ghani, who has been visiting the United States this week.
While the decision will mean that some American soldiers who had expected to return home will rotate back into Afghanistan for a few extra months, Obama said, the additional time will be “well worth it”.
The extension was needed in part “so we don’t have to go back,” Obama said, “so we don’t have to respond in an emergency because terrorist activities are being launched out of Afghanistan.” Ghani, who expressed gratitude to American troops and taxpayers for their support, said the extension would allow his military to better prepare for the total withdrawal of United States forces, still scheduled for the end of 2016.
“Much binds us together, and the flexibility that has been provided for 2015 will be used to accelerate reforms to ensure that the Afghan security forces are much better led, equipped, trained, and are focused on their fundamental mission,” Ghani said, speaking in mostly English during the news conference. Ghani’s meetings with his American counterpart were part of a five-day visit to the United States that included a series of discussions on Monday at Camp David, the presidential retreat in the mountains of Maryland.
His trip will continue Wednesday with an address to a joint meeting of Congress, and on Thursday, when Ghani will meet with world leaders at the United Nations. While the primary mission of Ghani’s trip is a military extension, he is also using his visit as a public-relations blitz aimed at repairing Afghanistan’s reputation as a country whose leaders have taken American help for granted over the past decade.
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