United States presence in
Afghanistan could fall as low as 5,000 - well below number military believe
necessary
The number
of US troops in Afghanistan may drop well below 10,000 - the minimum demanded
by the US military to train Afghan forces - as the longest war in American
history winds down, White House officials have briefed.
Since
Afghanistan’s general election on April 5, White House, State Department and
Pentagon officials have resumed discussions on how many American troops should
remain after the current US-led coalition ends its mission this year.
The decision
to consider a small force, possibly less than 5,000 US troops, reflects a
belief among White House officials that Afghan security forces have evolved
into a robust enough force to contain a still-potent Taliban-led insurgency.
The small US force that would remain could focus on counter-terrorism or
training operations.
That belief,
the officials say, is based partly on Afghanistan’s surprisingly smooth
election, which has won international praise for its high turnout, estimated at
60 percent of 12 million eligible votes, and the failure of Taliban militants
to stage high-profile attacks that day.
The Obama
administration has been looking at options for a possible residual US force for
months.
“The discussion is very much alive,” said one
US official who asked not to be identified. “They’re looking for additional
options under 10,000” troops.
There are
now about 33,000 US troops in Afghanistan, down from 100,000 in 2011, when
troop numbers peaked a decade into a conflict originally intended to deny al
Qaeda sanctuary in Afghanistan after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
With British
and other foreign troops scheduled to depart at the same time as US soldiers,
the size of any residual US force could add fuel to a debate in Washington over
whether Taliban-led violence will intensify amid the vacuum left by Western
forces, as some US military officials expect.
Military
leaders, including American General Joe Dunford, who heads US and NATO forces
in Afghanistan, has identified 10,000 soldiers as the minimum needed to help
train and advise Afghan forces fighting the insurgency, arguing a smaller force
would struggle to protect itself.
During a
March visit to Washington, General Dunford told lawmakers that without foreign
soldiers supporting them, Afghan forces would begin to deteriorate “fairly
quickly” in 2015. The Afghan air force, still several years away from being
self-sufficient, will require even more assistance, he said.
A smaller US
force could have other unintended consequences, possibly discouraging already
skeptical lawmakers from fully funding US commitments to help fund Afghan
forces.
At their
current size, Afghan forces will cost at least $5 billion (£ 3 billion) in
2015, a sum far beyond the reach of the Afghan government. The United States
has been widely expected to be the largest outside funder for those forces.
The Taliban
and other militants have been weakened by more than 12 years of Afghan and NATO
assaults, but they still can obtain supplies and plan attacks from
Afghanistan’s remote mountain regions and tribal areas of neighboring Pakistan.
Some
analysts are wary of reducing the US presence to less than 10,000 troops.
“If the
White House opts to keep a lower number of troops, it will put more pressure on
the Afghan forces and run the risk of squandering their recent progress against
the Taliban,” said Lisa Curtis, a former CIA analyst and State Department
official now with the conservative Heritage Foundation, a think tank in Washington.
A US force
significantly below 10,000 might focus almost exclusively on counter-terrorism,
tracking militants affiliated with a greatly weakened but resilient al Qaeda
insurgency based on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, officials said.
Debate over
the size of a residual US force follows the failure of the US and Afghan
governments to finalize a Bilateral Security Agreement (BSA) to authorize a US
troop presence in Afghanistan beyond 2014, the deadline for US and NATO troops
to conclude their fight against the Taliban.
“The longer
we go without a BSA, the more challenging it will be to plan and execute any US
mission,” said Laura Lucas Magnuson, a White House spokeswoman. “Furthermore,
the longer we go without a BSA, the more likely it will be that any post-2014
US mission will be smaller in scale and ambition.”
Results of
the recent presidential election may not be known for weeks, or months if
runoffs take place. But leading candidates have said they will sign the
agreement, which has been on hold because of reservations from current Afghan
President Hamid Karzai.
In late
February, Obama announced that the United States might seek to sign the deal
with Karzai’s successor and possibly keep troops there after 2014 to train and
advise Afghan forces and pursue al Qaeda militants.
Some US
officials believe Afghan forces will require substantial, hands-on support from
foreign troops, in addition to help from the United States.
Edited by Oluwalana
Samuel
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