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		 On 
		Christmas visit with troops, Obama lauds end of Afghanistan mission 
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		[December 26, 2014] 
		By Julia Edwards
 KANOEHE BAY, Hawaii (Reuters) - One week 
		before the U.S. combat mission in Afghanistan draws to a close, 
		President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, thanked American troops 
		on Thursday during a Christmas Day visit to Marine Corps Base Hawaii in 
		Kanoehe Bay.
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			 One man in the crowd yelled "Huah!", a traditional cheer of the 
			U.S. military, and the audience applauded as Obama spoke of the 
			United States officially ending its fighting role in Afghanistan 
			after 13 years of conflict. 
 "Because of the extraordinary service of the men and women in the 
			American armed forces, Afghanistan has a chance to rebuild its own 
			country," Obama said.
 
 The Taliban were ousted by U.S.-backed Afghan forces in 2001, 
			following the Sept. 11 attacks on America by Islamist militants 
			using hijacked airliners, and the United States has kept a military 
			presence there ever since.
 
 
			
			 
			With the end of the NATO-led combat mission in Afghanistan, the 
			Obama administration said earlier this month it would leave a 
			residual U.S. force of about 10,800 troops behind for at least the 
			first few months of 2015 to help provide support to Afghan security 
			forces.
 
 This year has been the deadliest in the war, with more than 4,000 
			Afghan soldiers and police killed during the past 12 months. The 
			conflict has claimed the lives of more than 2,000 U.S. military 
			personnel.
 
 Obama told a crowd of 420 people, including troops and their 
			families, gathered in the U.S. Marine base's Anderson Hall dining 
			facility that Afghanistan is "not going to be a source of terrorist 
			attacks again."
 
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			Obama said the United States still has "some very difficult missions 
			around the world," mentioning Iraq, where U.S.-led coalition forces 
			are countering the Islamic State. In Africa, U.S. troops are helping 
			to battle an Ebola epidemic that has killed at least 7,500 people.
 The president and first lady then spent time talking to the troops 
			individually and taking pictures with families.
 
 Vice President Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, visited wounded troops 
			at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center near Washington, 
			D.C., on Thursday.
 
 The White House said the Obamas spent Christmas morning opening 
			presents and singing carols and then spent the afternoon at a nearby 
			beach.
 
 (Editing by Steve Gorman and Paul Tait)
 
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