WASHINGTON: Gen Mark Milley, the US military's top officer, outlined on Wednesday a “worst-case” scenario in Afghanistan following the withdrawal of foreign troops, warning of a potential civil war and return of al-Qaeda, foreign media reported.
"Tough situation, no good answers to any of it," Gen Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the Sedona Forum, hosted by the McCain Institute. President Joe Biden this month announced all US forces would quit Afghanistan by September 11. Other foreign nations with troops in the country will also leave.
"[In] the worst-case analysis, you have a potential collapse of the government, a potential collapse of the military, you have civil war, you have all the humanitarian catastrophe that goes with it and the potential for the return of al-Qaeda sometime down the road,” Gen Milley said. But, he added, such an outcome was not a “forgone conclusion”, pointing to the possibility of a deal between the Afghan government and the Taliban. The US will "continue to support diplomatic efforts to bring a negotiating outcome between the insurgents and the regime and that would be best for the people of Afghanistan and best for region," Gen Milley said.
Asked if the Pentagon would have preferred to leave a residual force in Afghanistan, Gen Milley said the military only offers recommendations to the president.
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