As the Obama administration continues to slow down its promised troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, new reporting by Reuters reveals U.S. military bases in Kandahar and Jalalabad are likely to remain open beyond the end of the year.
Speaking with an unnamed senior official, Reuters reports the policy reversal “reflects the U.S. embrace of Afghanistan’s new and more cooperative president, Ashraf Ghani, and a desire to avoid the kind of collapse of local security forces that occurred in Iraq after the U.S. pull-out there.”
Click Here: New Zealand rugby store
Ghani is visiting the U.S. next week, which is when officials expect for Obama to officially announce the altered timeline for military withdrawal. The White House said last May that troops would be cut to 5,500 by the end of 2015, but officials said over the weekend that the administration could allow up to 9,800 to remain in Afghanistan well into the 2016 “fighting season.”
Regarding the specific bases in Kandahar and Jalalabad, Reuters continues:
The first senior official also told Reuters that the U.S. military might also maintain an “aerial presence” in Afghanistan past 2017.