WASHINGTON, Nov 25 (APP): After
long deliberations, President Barack Obama is set to announce a revamped U.S.
strategy for Afghanistan in a speech next Tuesday night at the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, New York, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs
said.According to CNN, the Pentagon was making detailed plans to send about
34,000 more U.S. troops to Afghanistan in anticipation of Obama’s decision on
the future of the 8-year-old war.
Obama has been holding a series
of meetings with his national security advisers over last few months on finding
a comprehensive way forward in Afghanistan, where more than 100,000 U.S.-led
international troops are deployed and trying to contain a spreading Taliban
insurgency.
A Defense Department official
with direct knowledge of the process said, according to CNN, there has been no
final word on the president’s decision. But planners have been tasked with
preparing to send 34,000 additional American troops into battle with the
expectation that is the number Obama is leaning toward approving, the official
said.
Obama ordered more than 20,000
additional troops to Afghanistan in March. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the U.S.
commander in Afghanistan, reportedly has called for up to 40,000 more to wage a
counterinsurgency campaign against the Taliban, the militia originally ousted by
the U.S. invasion in 2001.
McChrystal, Vice President Joe
Biden, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm.
Michael Mullen and Karl Eikenberry, the U.S. ambassador in Kabul, were among the
officials who attended a White House meeting on Afghan strategy on Monday.
Obama said Tuesday that the
deliberations have been “comprehensive and extremely useful.”
The news channel reported that
the U.S. troops would be dispatched throughout Afghanistan but would be focused
mainly on the southern and southeastern provinces, where much of the recent
fighting has taken place.
About 68,000 U.S. troops are in
Afghanistan, along with about 45,000 from the NATO alliance.
Two U.S. military officials
said NATO countries would be asked to contribute more troops to fill the gap
between the 34,000 the Pentagon expects Obama to send and the 40,000 McChrystal
wanted. The request is expected to come during a December 7 meeting at the
alliance’s headquarters in Brussels, Belgium.
U.S.-led troops invaded
Afghanistan in response to the al Qaeda terrorist network’s September 11 attacks
on New York and Washington. The invasion overthrew the Taliban, which had
allowed al Qaeda to operate from its territory, but most of the top al Qaeda and
Taliban leadership escaped the onslaught.
Taliban fighters have since
regrouped in the mountainous region along Afghanistan’s border with Pakistan,
battling U.S. and Afghan government forces on one side and Pakistani troops on
the other. Al Qaeda’s top leaders, Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, remain
at large.
On Tuesday, President Obama
renewed his administration’s mission to dismantle and defeat al-Qaeda as he
received Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh. India’s involvement has been met
with suspicion in Pakistan, which accuses India’s of involvement in fueling
unrest and terrorist activities in Balochistan and tribal areas.
Several leading analysts have
argued that settling the decades-old tensions - mainly centering around Kashmir
- between India and Pakistan would allow both sides to pull troops off their
borders giving Pakistan more resources to battle the Taliban along its northwest
frontier.
“I think that will certainly be
at the center of the agenda this week,” Nicholas Burns, a former State
Department official, said.
“The United States is not going
to be an outright mediator between Pakistan and India, but we can quietly,
behind the scenes, push them to reduce their problems,” Burns said.