US President Barack Obama on Wednesday scrapped plans to cut US forces in Afghanistan by half before leaving office, a dispiriting blow to his hopes of extricating the US after 15 years of fighting. He said he would leave 8,400 troops to address the country’s “precarious” security situation.
Obama’s new drawdown plan, announced alongside top military leaders, reinforced the likelihood that the US will remain entangled in Afghanistan for years to come as the US works to suppress a resurgent Taliban and train a still-struggling Afghan military.
Indeed, Obama said his goal was to ensure the next president has the foundation and flexibility to fight terrorism there “as it evolves.”
Obama acknowledged that few Americans might have expected US troops would still be in Afghanistan this long after the 2001 invasion following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
However, he said perseverance was needed to prevent al-Qaeda from regrouping and the Islamic State group from spreading.
He said that if terrorists regain control of territory, they will try to attack the US again.
“We cannot allow that to happen. I will not allow that to happen,” he said.
Obama, who had revised the exit plan several times before, had most recently expected to leave 5,500 troops when his term ends in January, down from about 9,800 there currently. His move to slow that withdrawal reflected the Afghan military’s continuing inability to secure the nation independently, demonstrated by escalating Taliban attacks that have killed scores in recent weeks.
The new plan, announced the day before Obama attends a NATO summit in Poland, marked the culmination of a delicate debate within his administration about how many troops to pull out — if any.
Though US officials said Obama had accepted the Pentagon’s formal recommendation of 8,400 troops, top military leaders had urged the White House to stay closer to the current 9,800.
In an unusually public lobbying campaign, last month, more than a dozen former ambassadors and commanders urged him to “freeze” the current level for the rest of his term.
In the end, Obama appeared to settle on a number that would show continued progress toward drawing down without jeopardizing the mission.
Elected after vowing to end the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Obama has struggled to deliver a legacy of leaving the US less encumbered by foreign conflicts than he found it.
Although he has declared US combat operations over in both countries, the US is still deep in conflict in both, plus major new fighting that has emerged in Syria and Libya since he took office.
In the US Congress, Republican leaders who favor a larger force said Obama’s new plan was preferable to the old one, but they criticized him for not keeping the full 9,800.
US Senator Lindsey Graham said the partial drawdown would increase the dangers for remaining troops, calling it “more a political decision by President Obama than a military one.”
Yet some Democrats, frustrated by the inability to fully end the war, said they were disappointed — for the opposite reason.
“Today, the longest war in American history just got longer,” US Representative Jim McGovern said.
Ultimately, it will be up to the next president to decide the level of US involvement.
Democratic US presidential hopeful Hillary Rodham Clinton has aligned herself with Obama’s handling of Afghanistan, while her Republican rival, Donald Trump, has remained vague and has criticized Obama for revealing too much publicly about deployment decisions.
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