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In the letter, the newspaper reported, Obama said he expected Pakistan to do more to fight the extremists threatening Pakistan and Afghanistan. Obama is expected to announce some troop increase along with clearer limitations on U.S. goals for the war after he returns from Asia late this week. The announcement is expected either just before or just after the Thanksgiving holiday. The post-holiday timing appears more likely, despite continued criticism from the political right that Obama is taking too long to announce his next move. The time is past, Clinton said, when U.S. officials would "talk about how we were going to help the Afghans build a modern democracy and build a more functioning state and do all these wonderful things." She added, "That could happen, but our primary focus is on the security of the United States of America
-- how do we protect and defend against future attacks." Presidential adviser David Axelrod made a similar point Sunday. "We have to keep focused on what our purpose was in the first place," he said on CNN. "Our purpose was to disrupt and dismantle and destroy al-Qaida. That remains our purpose, but obviously we cannot make an open-ended commitment." Axelrod dismissed GOP criticism that as a political adviser he should not have sat in secret meetings of the president's war council over the past several weeks. Axelrod said he did not speak during those sessions and was there to better understand the emerging strategy so he can reflect it accurately to the press and others. Obama's top war commander, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, has laid out military options for employing between about 10,000 and 40,000 additional U.S. troops next year, and prefers the high end, military officials have said. Obama rejected four troop options presented at a war council session Wednesday, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Thursday that the focus is now on choosing the best elements from those plans. Military officials have said the most likely outcome is a middle path that would add some 20,000 to 35,000 troops.
[Associated
Press;
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