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US Ahead of Schedule in Withdrawal from Afghanistan

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The United States has reduced its troop presence in Afghanistan to 8,600, fulfilling its obligation as part of a February deal with the Taliban, the general who oversees American forces in that region said Thursday.

Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie noted that the February deal requires the U.S. to fully withdraw its troops by next May.

He called that an “aspirational” commitment that would depend on certain actions by the Taliban.

President Donald Trump has been eager for a full U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, asserting that American soldiers are merely policing a civil conflict and should be brought home. The war began in October 2001.

The February agreement said the U.S. would drop to 8,600 troops by mid-July. It represents a reduction from about 12,000 at the time of the agreement.

“We have met our part of the agreement,” McKenzie said, speaking at an Aspen Strategy Group webinar.

The general said a full U.S. withdrawal would happen if conditions are right.

“Conditions would have to be met that satisfy us that attacks against our homeland are not going to be generated from Afghanistan,” he said.

“That’s not the Taliban. That is, of course, al-Qaida and ISIS,” referring to the extremist group that planned the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in Afghanistan during the Taliban’s previous rule, as well as the Islamic State group’s Afghanistan affiliate.

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As part of the February deal, the Taliban agreed they would not allow any extremist group to use Afghan territory to plan or carry out attacks on the United States.

“The jury is still very much out on that” commitment, McKenzie said, “and so we will watch the Taliban.”

He added, “They have not yet completely made that case. There remains an opportunity for them to do it, but time is now beginning to grow short.”

McKenzie spoke cautiously of trends in Iraq, where several thousand U.S. troops are training and advising Iraqi forces and contending with periodic hostility from Iranian-backed militia groups.

Although he praised recent efforts by the Iraqi government to deal with Iranian influences in the country, he cited “a beginning of a spike in unprovoked rocket attacks on Iraqi bases that host U.S. forces.”

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He said he thinks Iran and its proxies in Iraq are conducting these recent attacks “because they have been unable to prevail in the political arena in Iraq.”

He spoke after Iraqi authorities reported that four rockets exploded inside Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone near the American Embassy. It was the third such reported attack since the U.S. embarked on strategic talks with Iraq’s new government.


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