US President Barack Obama ignored military advice for a more modest drawdown from Afghanistan, his commanders said on Thursday, suggesting his decision carried risks for the war effort.
Both General David Petraeus and Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Obama’s plan to withdraw 33,000 surge troops by the end of next summer was more “aggressive” than they had recommended.
Asked by Senator Carl Levin if he was prepared to resign over the war policy, Petraeus said: “I don’t think it’s the place for the commander to consider that kind of step unless you are in a very, very dire situation.”
Photo: AFP
Petraeus, who indicated that he had received e-mails suggesting he quit in protest, said: “This is an important decision, it is again a more aggressive approach than the chairman [Mullen], [Central Command chief General James] Mattis and I would have, indeed certainly, put forward. But this is not something where one hangs up the uniform in protest or something like that.”
The four-star officer, who is due to step down in a few weeks as Obama’s top commander in the fight against the Taliban-led insurgency and take over as CIA director, is credited by many for salvaging the war in Iraq.
His testimony in the US Congress provided more ammunition to Obama’s critics on the right who accuse the president of endorsing a withdrawal plan for purely political motives ahead of presidential elections next year.
In an interview, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates endorsed Obama’s plan, but acknowledged that waning political support for the grinding counter-insurgency campaign was an important factor in the decision.
The military’s top officer, Mullen, offered a qualified endorsement of Obama’s decision, telling lawmakers that he had initially favored a more modest drawdown.
Mullen said “the president’s decisions are more aggressive and incur more risk than I was originally prepared to accept.”
However, he said that keeping more forces in place also carried risks, including enabling Kabul to become more dependent on the US military presence.
“Let me be candid, however. No commander ever wants to sacrifice fighting power in the middle of a war and no decision to demand that sacrifice is ever without risk,” he warned.
Both Mullen and Petraeus said the president had to take into account other considerations beyond military conditions, a clear reference to political and fiscal pressures.
The US public is increasingly impatient with a war that has dragged on nearly a decade. In a new Pew Research Center poll, 56 percent of respondents — the highest ever — said US troops should be brought home as soon as possible.
White House officials insist Obama’s move was based on military strategy — not politics — and that progress on the battlefield and the killing of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden had made the drawdown possible.
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