Afghans, diplomats surprised by report of
Trump plan to pull out troops
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[December 21, 2018]
By Hamid Shalizi, Rupam Jain and James Mackenzie
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghan officials and
America's Western partners reacted with unease on Friday to reports that
the United States planned to withdraw more than 5,000 of its 14,000
troops from Afghanistan, after tentative steps toward peace talks.
Although there has been increasing acceptance in Kabul that U.S.
President Donald Trump was impatient for progress in ending the 17-year
war, comment from a U.S. official that he was planning to withdraw at
least 5,000 troops, coupled with the resignation of Defense Secretary
Jim Mattis, came as a surprise.
Mattis has been widely seen in Afghanistan as a guarantor of U.S.
engagement, and his departure would inevitability raise worries in the
minds of many Afghan officials.
The news followed a two-day meeting in Abu Dhabi between U.S. special
peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and Taliban representatives at which the
two sides discussed the withdrawal of international forces and a
ceasefire in 2019.
However, with the plans still unconfirmed and further meetings expected
in Saudi Arabia in early January, it was unclear whether a ceasefire was
close and whether the news heralded a wider settlement.
"The withdrawal will certainly affect overall operations but we will
have to wait and see which units are going to go home first. It is too
early to say anything for now," said a senior Afghan government
official.
"Depending on how the Taliban react, the government might ask forces to
reduce operations," he said.
But Haroon Chakansuri, spokesman for President Ashraf Ghani, said the
withdrawal would not affect overall security because the role of U.S.
forces has been to assist and advise Afghan troops.
The United States has about 14,000 troops in Afghanistan as part of a
NATO-led mission, known as Resolute Support, and a separate U.S.
counter-terrorism mission largely directed against militant groups like
Islamic State and al Qaeda.
In addition, some 8,000 troops from 38 other countries in Resolute
Support provide training and support for Afghan forces.
The Taliban are fighting to oust foreign forces and defeat the
Western-backed Kabul government.
With the insurgents in control of large stretches of the country and
chronically understrength Afghan forces suffering thousands of
casualties a month, even a partial U.S. withdrawal could reduce the
incentive of the Taliban to strike a deal and erode the willingness of
Afghan troops to fight.
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U.S. and Afghan National Army (ANA) soldiers chat with each other at
a post in Deh Bala district, Nangarhar province, Afghanistan July 7,
2018. REUTERS/James Mackenzie
"We all know the morale of the Afghan forces has hit an all-time
low, they are under-equipped, poorly paid and they lack
coordination. We train them to the best of our abilities," said a
Western diplomat from a Resolute Support member.
'NO CONSULTATION'
A withdrawal of so many U.S. troops would represent an abrupt shift
in U.S. strategy announced a year ago, which saw thousands of troops
sent to Afghanistan and air strikes intensified to put pressure on
the Taliban to talk.
But for months, diplomats have joked grimly about a "Tweet of
Damocles" hanging over Afghanistan - the fear that Trump could take
to social media to announce the United States was pulling out.
With the reports from Washington still unconfirmed, there was no
comment from the headquarters of the NATO-led mission in Kabul but
the news appeared to have caught some allies by surprise.
"The U.S. has not consulted us on the withdrawal and today we will
start meetings to discuss it," said one Western diplomat in Kabul.
"It will take a while and there are some countries who are ready to
exit. So they could be the first to leave."
Another senior diplomat in Kabul said countries with military or
development commitments might now make plans independent of U.S.
strategy.
"Each country has to answer this one question: Should we stay in
Afghanistan?" the diplomat said.
A senior security official working for an international organization
said Afghan officials would be shaken by the news.
"We're keeping a watch on how Afghan elites, policymakers react to
this ... Many have been sharing their exit plans with us and now we
could see them implement them," the official said.
(Editing by Robert Birsel)
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