WASHINGTON (AP) — President
Barack Obama will keep 5,500 U.S. troops in Afghanistan when he leaves
office in 2017, according to senior administration officials, casting
aside his promise to end the war on his watch and instead ensuring he
hands the conflict off to his successor.
Obama had
originally planned to pull out all but a small, embassy-based U.S.
military presence by the end of next year, a timeline coinciding with
the final weeks of his presidency. But military leaders argued for
months that the Afghans needed additional assistance and support from
the U.S. to beat back a resurgent Taliban and hold onto gains made over
the last 14 years of American bloodshed and billions of dollars in aid.
The
president was to announce the changes Thursday morning from the White
House. Officials said he would outline plans to maintain the current
force of 9,800 troops in Afghanistan through most of next year, then
draw down to 5,500 troops in 2017, at a pace still to be determined by
commanders.
The officials
previewed the decisions on the condition of anonymity because they were
not authorized to discuss the matter publicly ahead of the president.
U.S.
officials have been hinting at the policy shift for weeks, noting that
conditions on the ground in Afghanistan have changed since Obama's
initial decision on a sharper troop withdrawal timeline was made more
than two years ago. The White House has also been buoyed by having a
more reliable partner in Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who succeeded
the mercurial Hamid Karzai last year."The narrative that we're leaving Afghanistan is self-defeating," Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Wednesday during a speech at the Association of the U.S. Army. "We're not, we can't, and to do so would not be to take advantage of the success we've had to date."
While officials said the
Afghan policy had been under review for several months, Obama's decision
to leave more forces in Afghanistan than initially envisioned was
reinforced when Taliban fighters took control of the key northern city
of Kunduz late last month, prompting a protracted battle with Afghan
forces on the ground, supported by U.S. airstrikes. During the fighting,
a U.S. airstrike hit a hospital, killing 22 people, including 12
Doctors Without Borders staff and 10 patients.
Beyond
the recent security troubles in Afghanistan, U.S. commanders have also
expressed concern about Islamic State fighters moving into the country
and gaining recruits from within the Taliban.
The troops staying
in Afghanistan beyond next year will continue to focus on
counterterrorism missions and training and advising Afghan security
forces, the officials said. They will be based in Kabul and Bagram Air
Field, as well as bases in Jalalabad and Kandahar.
The
president's decision to keep the U.S. military in Afghanistan beyond
his tenure thrusts the conflict into the 2016 presidential race. The
next president will become the third U.S. commander in chief to oversee
the war, with the options of trying to bring it to a close, maintaining
the presence as Obama left it or even ramping up U.S. involvement in the
conflict.
Until now,
Afghanistan has barely factored into campaign discussions on foreign
policy and was not mentioned in Tuesday's Democratic debate. The war was
discussed only briefly in two Republican debates.
Shukria Barakzai, a high-profile Afghan lawmaker and women's
rights advocate, said she hoped her country's security would "not become
a tool between the Republicans and Democrats" in the election. "I hope
the Afghanistan issue is taken seriously," she said.
Officials
said discussions on staying in Afghanistan longer began during Ghani's
visit to Washington in March. The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan,
Gen. John Campbell, recently presented the president with a range of
options calling for keeping more troops there based on his judgment of
what it would take to sustain the Afghan army and minimize the chances
of losing more ground.
Officials
said NATO allies had expressed support for extending the troop presence
in Afghanistan, but they did not outline any specific commitments from
other nations.
Last week,
during a meeting of defense ministers, Carter urged allies to remain
flexible and consider abandoning their earlier timelines to cut troop
levels in Afghanistan. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and other
defense ministers were quick to agree, saying that the size of the
force should be based on security conditions rather than a fixed
timeline.
Upending the troop withdrawal decision, however, carries broad political implications.
Obama campaigned for the
White House on a pledge to end America's involvement in the two wars he
inherited, Iraq and Afghanistan. Now, he'll likely finish his presidency
with troops back in both countries.
The president did withdraw
all U.S. troops from Iraq in late 2011, a moment he heralded as a
promise kept to a war-weary nation. But the rise of the Islamic State
drew the U.S. military back into Iraq last year to train and assist
local security forces and launch airstrikes, a campaign Obama has said
will likely last beyond his tenure.
Obama
announced the end of the Afghan war with similar fanfare last spring,
saying it was time for the U.S. to "turn the page" on more than a decade
of deadly conflicts. But his remarks at the time also foreshadowed the
difficulties he would face in fulfilling that pledge.
"Americans have learned that it's harder to end wars than it is to begin them," he said.
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Associated Press writer Deb Riechmann in Washington and Lynne O'Donnell in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.
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