a |
|
Defence News - United States
|
|
|
|
|
Friday, January
4, 2013, 09:02 AM |
|
United
States could keep between 6,000 to 15,000 troops in Afghanistan after 2014
withdrawal. |
The
United States could keep between 6,000 and 15,000 troops in Afghanistan
after the official 2014 NATO withdrawal, say officials familiar with plans
submitted to the Pentagon by the current U.S. commander in that country,
Gen. John Allen. (By Mike Mount)
|
|
There are currently 66,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
|
|
Allen was tasked with developing
an overarching plan for how U.S. forces will leave Afghanistan over
the next two years, as well as solidifying a post-international combat
troop presence. Now he has offered three distinctive options for the
president, according to senior defense officials.
The officials said Allen's plans - created with input from Defense Secretary
Leon Panetta's office, the Joint Staff, the U.S. Central Command, and
the White House - would give President Barack Obama options based on
what he is looking to do in Afghanistan.
The plans are awaiting official approval from Panetta, the officials
said.
The low-end option calls for 6,000 to 6,500 troops that would be strictly
for counterterrorism operations: hunting down Taliban and al Qaeda members
and cells still operating around the country. This would require mostly
Special Operations Forces, with a limited number of support troops and
only a very small amount of training assistance for Afghan forces.
The mid-range option, involving around 10,000 troops, would still have
the main focus on counterterrorism operations, but it would have a bigger
training footprint for Afghan forces, with most of the focus on Special
Operations troops and a limited amount of conventional troop training.
The 15,000-troop option would bring in a greater number of conventional
troops for training Afghan Security Forces, as well as a bigger support
element in addition to the counterterrorism forces.
Last spring, NATO and the Afghan government agreed on a plan for the
United States and international forces to end the NATO mission in Afghanistan
and hand over full security responsibility of the country to the Afghan
government. At the end of last September - as the final troops added
during the "surge" that Obama ordered in December 2009 left
Afghanistan - the president ordered Allen to assess the situation in
the country and develop an exit strategy.
|
|