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"There have been improvements, but there is still a long way to go," he told reporters who accompanied him. The White House assessment asserted that the Taliban's momentum had been halted in much of Afghanistan, while cautioning that these gains are "fragile and reversible." Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, made a similar point in remarks to reporters earlier this month, but with an important caveat not seen in Thursday's report: The Taliban, he said, still has freedom of movement and momentum in some areas. Obama cast the war as part of a broader effort to defeat al-Qaida, which is not present in Afghanistan in large numbers but has sanctuary in neighboring Pakistan. He stressed both the threat posed by al-Qaida and the progress that has been made in frustrating the group's efforts to pursue catastrophic attacks on the United States. "It will take time to ultimately defeat al-Qaida," he said, "and it remains a ruthless and resilient enemy bent on attacking our country. But make no mistake. We are going to remain relentless in disrupting and dismantling that terrorist organization." Bruce Riedel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank, said the administration was right to make only modest claims of progress in the war. "We are far from being on the edge of anything anyone would describe as success" in either Afghanistan or Pakistan, he said in a written analysis of the White House review. "Yet at the same time, we are no longer close to the precipice of defeat and strategic disaster as we were when the president inherited the war in January 2009." While U.S., NATO and Afghan forces have pushed insurgents from their strongholds in southern Afghanistan this year and are aggressively going after militants in the east, the Taliban have opened new fronts in the west and the north where security has been deteriorating. The U.S. is likely to continue to press the Pakistanis to rout insurgents in North Waziristan, an area along the Afghan border where senior al-Qaida leaders are believed to be hiding. But U.S. officials have concluded that Pakistan is unwilling to mount a major offensive in North Waziristan, partly because the Pakistani army is already stretched. The White House report offered no concrete proposals for getting Pakistan to do more, saying simply that denying havens for extremists on the Pakistan side of the border "will require greater cooperation with Pakistan," and adding that this will require effective economic development work in addition to military might. The U.S. has spent far more in Iraq over a shorter period, but costs in Afghanistan are growing. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the U.S. spent an average of $5.4 billion a month in Afghanistan in the budget year that ended in September, and the total cost since the war began stands at $336 billion
[Associated
Press;
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