Editor in Chief: Moh. Reza Huwaida Monday, May 6th, 2024

Ghani Seeks Anti-Terror Partnership: Campbell

Ghani Seeks Anti-Terror  Partnership: Campbell

KABUL - The commander of NATO’s Resolute Support mission and U.S. forces in Afghanistan has said Afghan President Ashraf Ghani wants to be partner with the United States in a regional counterterrorism aspect.

Army Gen. John F. Campbell said Ghani has suggested Afghanistan host a regional counterterrorism effort. Afghan counterterrorism forces are among the best in the region, the general said, but they still need training and equipment.

“He wants to continue to build that capability and knows that he needs our help to do that,” Campbell said in an interview with reporters on Sunday traveling with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey.

Ghani also is reaching out to other regional players including China, Russia, Iran, Pakistan, India, “the ‘Stans” and the United States, Campbell said. His message is that terrorism is a regional threat and it needs to be fought on a regional basis. “He is saying to them, ‘Afghanistan is fighting your fight,’” the general said.

Afghanistan is about halfway through the 2015 fighting season, and Campbell said he is weighing his best military advice to U.S. leaders at the conclusion of this campaign.

About 9,800 U.S. service members are in Afghanistan today. Plans originally called for a reduction to 5,500 earlier this year, but Ghani appealed to President Barack Obama to maintain the level of troops through the fighting season.

“We’re looking at the state of the national unity government and the state of the Afghan security forces,” the general said. He will also look at the set and basing of American forces in the country, he said, and “then I have to look at the state of the insurgency.”

His recommendation will go through U.S. Central Command to the Joint Staff, the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the National Security Council before reaching the president. “I think it is still too early to make a recommendation,” Campbell said.

The appearance in Afghanistan of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) aka Daesh is worrisome and puts a new wrinkle of his deliberations, the general said, noting that the terror group has attracted some violent and vicious adherents since it first appeared last year. (Pajhwok)