Half of US troops from Kabul might leave
Kabul: US President Donald Trump has decided to pull a significant number of troops from Afghanistan, a US official has said, but the Afghan presidency on Friday brushed off concerns the drawdown would affect security.
Reports suggested as many as half of the 14,000 troops in the war-torn country could be leaving.
The surprise move stunned and dismayed foreign diplomats and officials in Kabul who are involved in an intensifying push to end the 17-year conflict with the Taliban, which already controls vast amounts of territory and is causing “unsustainable” Afghan troop casualties.
“If you’re the Taliban, Christmas has come early,” a senior foreign official in the Afghan capital said on condition of anonymity.
“Would you be thinking of a ceasefire if your main opponent has just withdrawn half their troops?” Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid would not comment about the troop withdrawal when contacted. But a senior Taliban commander welcomed the decision.
“Frankly speaking we weren’t expecting that immediate US response,” the official said from an unknown location in northwest Pakistan.
“We are more than happy, they realised the truth. We are expecting more good news.”
A spokesman for Afghan President Ashraf Ghani downplayed the pullout.
“If they withdraw from Afghanistan it will not have a security impact because in the last four and half years the Afghans have been in full control,” presidential spo-kesman Haroon Cha-khansuri said.