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Written by Ed Pilkington in New York Ed Pilkington in New York
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Category: News News
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Published: 24 November 2009 24 November 2009
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Last Updated: 24 November 2009 24 November 2009
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Created: 24 November 2009 24 November 2009
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US president set to make official announcement on US troop levels early next week
Barack Obama said today that he intended to "finish the job" in
Afghanistan, as it became clear that he is poised to announce early
next week the deployment of up to 35,000 more troops to the troubled
region in one of the most crucial decisions of his young presidency.
Obama told reporters at a White House press conference for his meeting
with the Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh that his prolonged review
into the next phase of the Afghan war, which will end with an address
to the nation probably next Tuesday, had been "comprehensive and
extremely useful".
He said: "After eight years, some of those years in which we did not
have either the resources or the strategy to get the job done, it is my
intention to finish the job. I feel very confident that when the
American people hear a clear rationale for what we're doing there and
how we intend to achieve our goals, they will be supportive."
The president is expected to make a prime-time speech, possibly his
first to be made in the symbolically weighty Oval Office. The contents
of the announcement will be crucial not only to the next phase of the
eight-year war in Afghanistan, but also to Obama's own sliding
popularity figures with US voters.
Anonymous briefings with several American news outlets all placed the
outcome of Obama's prolonged deliberations on what to do with
Afghanistan in the same rough area.
If those reports prove correct, he has decided to send between 30,000
and 35,000 more troops to the war zone, focusing their firepower
largely on the politically crucial regions of eastern and southern
Afghanistan.
Significantly, though, he is also likely to build into the plan an exit
strategy that will allow for a staged withdrawal of American troops if
the prospects of the US-led military operation fails to improve.
The likely outcome brings the president's position closely in line with
the views of Stanley McChrystal, the top US military commander in
Afghanistan, who incurred White House criticism by going public with
his preferred option of around 40,000 extra troops.
McChrystal will be among leading military and administration figures
who will face questioning from the House of Representatives and Senate
immediately after Obama's address.
Others who will answer for the new policy to congressional committees
include the secretary of state Hillary Clinton; defence secretary
Robert Gates; and Karl Eikenberry, the US ambassador to Afghanistan who
has put forward a contrasting opinion to McChrystal's, that there
should be no more troops sent to Afghanistan unless the Afghan
government of Hamid Karzai can show it is standing up to corruption.
The congressional hearings will be important in rallying political
support behind the troop deployment. As the military operation against
a resurgent Taliban has faced setbacks, and US casualties grown,
popular backing for the war in Afghanistan has diminished as has been
reflected in growing unease among Democratic politicians in Congress.
In a recent ABC News poll, confidence in the Obama administration's
handling of Afghanistan had fallen by 10 percentage points in just a
month, to 45%, while disapproval had risen to 47%.
The president will hope to assuage some of the anxieties on the
Democratic side about the progress of the war by including a clear
statement that he does not intend the military engagement to be
bottomless and endless. His spokesman Robert Gibbs said that the
strategy was "not just how we get people there, but what's the strategy
for getting them out".
In his final meeting with the war council last night - the last of nine
such meetings - Obama requested a briefing from military leaders on how
an exit strategy might work.
To present the American people with a double-headed policy in which a
surge in troop numbers is coupled with talk of exiting Afghanistan is
likely to test Obama's political skills to the full. However, foreign
policy experts said that if he delivered the announcement with
confidence he would be able to get the message across.
"No war is intended to last forever, so it makes logical sense to put
in enough troops to make sure we can get the job done and then get the
hell out of there," said Michael O'Hanlon, senior fellow at the
Brookings Institution in Washington.
O'Hanlon said that Obama would also be under pressure to clarify his
attitude towards the widely discredited Afghan regime which was
implicated in electoral fraud at last month's presidential elections.
"It will be fascinating to see how he describes Karzai."