Thursday, March 19, 2015
Now that we have a new "friendly Afghan" president
We can't really bring home the troops yet. We still have to shower the new guy with untold riches in hopes that a policy that has failed for the last 13 years may yet succeed. Sounds like a plan.
The U.S. military bases in Kandahar and Jalalabad are likely to remain open beyond the end of 2015, a senior U.S. official said, as Washington considers slowing its military pullout from Afghanistan to help the new government fight the Taliban, reported Reuters on Wednesday.I am willing to like the new Afghan president as much as the next person, but why do we have to continue supporting a failed policy at great expense? As part of The Great American Empire, Afghanistan is the hemorrhoids on the asshole. And when your hemorrhoids are bad you have them removed, you don't hang on to them. Everybody from the Macedonians to the Russians has learned that lesson, why can't we.
The anticipated policy reversal reflects the U.S. embrace of Afghanistan's new and more cooperative president, Ashraf Ghani, and a desire to avoid the kind of collapse of local security forces that occurred in Iraq after the U.S. pullout there.
It coincides with new efforts backed by Pakistan and China for peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban. Washington has welcomed greater engagement by China, which has helped create a diplomatic opening for reconciliation.
The U.S. official said conditions had changed since May when President Barack Obama declared that by the end of 2015 the U.S. force would be roughly halved from the current total of about 10,000 and would operate only from bases in Kabul and Bagram.
The White House had no immediate comment on the possibility of maintaining the Kandahar and Jalalabad bases into next year.
Obama is expected to decide in the next few days whether to slow the pace of the U.S. troop withdrawal, possibly by next week when Ghani and Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah travel to Washington.
U.S. officials hope the visit will garner American public support for a longer military mission and display a contrast to their prickly dealings with former president Hamid Karzai.
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