Pentagon to decide US troop levels in Afghanistan
US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis
President Donald Trump’s decision to allow his Pentagon
chief to set United States troop levels
in Afghanistan won’t mean an immediate infusion of troops but should improve
management of the war effort, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Wednesday.
Still missing: an overall Trump strategy for America’s longest conflict.
“I will set the U.S. military commitment, consistent with
the commander in chief’s strategic direction,” Mattis told a Senate panel,
announcing a break with past White House control over troop numbers.
Mattis made the announcement a day after being verbally
hammered by Sen. John McCain, the Senate Armed Services Committee’s Republican
chairman, for the administration’s failure to present an overarching strategy
for Afghanistan. McCain said the U.S. is “not winning” in Afghanistan. Mattis
agreed.
Forced from power after U.S. troops invaded in October 2001,
the Taliban have been resurgent, increasing their hold on numerous areas of the
country and inflicting heavy losses of Afghan security forces.
The U.S. has about 8,400 troops in Afghanistan, a cap set by
President Barack Obama’s White House, which closely controlled troop numbers in
Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria in a manner similar to the way the Bush
administration handled such matters. Trump’s decision to delegate that
authority to Mattis reflects the president’s view that wars are better managed
by the Pentagon; he previously provided Mattis leeway to determine how many
U.S. troops are in Syria and Iraq.
“This ensures the department can facilitate our missions and
nimbly align our commitment to the situation on the ground,” Mattis said,
adding that the essential U.S. goals in Afghanistan remain unchanged: help
Afghan combat forces gain the upper hand on the Taliban, and hunt and kill
Islamic extremists affiliated with al-Qaida and the Islamic State.
Hours later, Mattis issued a written statement that provided
no further details on Trump’s decision but said counterterrorism efforts in
Afghanistan are “making progress in degrading” groups like al-Qaida and the
Islamic State. “But their defeat will come about only by giving our men and
women on the ground the support and the authorities they need to win,” he
added.
Some, however, questioned the wisdom of the president
delegating such authority to the Pentagon.
Christine Wormuth, the Pentagon’s top policy official from
2014 to 2016, expressed confidence in Mattis’ judgment and said she wouldn’t be
bothered by an arrangement in which the president gave his defense secretary
the authority to adjust troop levels within a broad range set by the White
House.
“To just say to Jim Mattis, ‘Do whatever you think is best,’
and for Secretary Mattis to be able to add 30,000 troops, for example, without
having to get the president to approve that, strikes me as unhealthy,” Wormuth
said.
“It certainly could be interpreted as the president kind of
distancing himself from these profound decisions and specifically from what
we’re doing in Afghanistan,” she added. “I have long been bothered by the fact
that the Afghanistan war has become the silent war. ... I don’t think most
Americans are even aware of it, and this (decision) is not going to help that.”
In his testimony, Mattis said U.S. troop levels won’t
necessarily change immediately. While he is expected to add at least a few
thousand troops soon, Mattis said he will act after further consultation with
other government agencies and in line with Trump’s strategic direction and
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s foreign policy. He said he expects allied
nations to contribute additional support troops as well.
Trump has said very little about his intentions in
Afghanistan. The administration has been reviewing its options, and Mattis
outlined an unchanged mission to the Senate Appropriations defense
subcommittee. U.S. forces are training, advising and assisting Afghan forces so
that they can defend their own country and “terrorists can find no haven”
there.
Later, Mattis said he could imagine the U.S. helping train
Afghan security forces “years from now,” even after the country is stabilized.
Obama ended the U.S. combat role in Afghanistan in 2014.
Throughout his tenure, Obama’s White House reviewed even small changes in U.S.
troop levels in Afghanistan. Trump came into office saying he intended to give
his generals more authority. In April, he allowed Mattis to set U.S. troop
levels in Iraq and Syria, where Americans are supporting local forces fighting
Islamic State militants.
As for strategy, Mattis said the administration’s war
approach is being developed in a broader context that includes Afghanistan’s
neighbors, Iran and Pakistan, as well as India. All have political stakes in
the outcome and Mattis spoke about the State Department putting diplomatic and
economic pressure on these countries.
Army Gen. John Nicholson, the top U.S. commander in
Afghanistan, has told Congress he could use an infusion of U.S. and allied
troops to bolster support for the Afghan army.
The Pentagon had considered a request for roughly 3,000 more
troops, mainly for training and advising. That decision, however, stalled amid
the administration’s Afghan review and a push for NATO to contribute more
troops.
AP
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