On Wednesday the U.S. officials
gave a report that the President’s doubts about the war in Afghanistan has led
to a delay in completing a new U.S. strategy in South Asia, skepticism that
included a suggestion that the U.S. military commander in the region be fired.
During a July 19 meeting in the White House Situation Room,
Trump demanded that his top national security aides provide more information on
what one official called "the end-state" in a country that the United
States has spent 16 years fighting against the Taliban with no end in sight.
The meeting grew stormy when Trump said Defense Secretary
James Mattis and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Joseph Dunford, a Marine
general, should consider firing Army General John Nicholson, commander of U.S.
forces in Afghanistan, for not winning the war.
"We aren't winning," he told them, according to
the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
In addition, once the meeting concluded, Trump's chief
strategist, Steve Bannon, got into what one official called "a shouting
match" with White House national security adviser H.R. McMaster over the
direction of U.S. policy.
Some officials left the meeting “stunned” by the president’s
vehement complaints that the military was allowing the United States to lose
the war
Mattis, McMaster and other top aides are putting together
answers to Trump's questions in a way to try to get him to approve the
strategy, the officials said.
Another meeting of top aides is scheduled on Thursday.
Although Trump earlier this year gave Mattis the authority
to deploy U.S. military forces as he sees fit, in fact the defense secretary's
plans to add around 4,000 more U.S. troops to the 8,400 currently deployed in
Afghanistan are being caught up in the delay surrounding the strategy, the
officials said.
"It's been contingent all along informally on the
strategy being approved," a senior administration official said of the
troop deployment.
Trump has long been a skeptic of lingering U.S. involvement
in foreign wars and has expressed little interest in deploying military forces
without a specific plan on what they will do and for how long.
Officials said Trump argued that the United States should
demand a share of Afghanistan’s estimated $1 trillion in mineral wealth in
exchange for its assistance to the Afghan government.
But other officials noted that without securing the entire
country, which could take many years, there is no way to get the country’s
mineral riches to market, except to Iran. Trump complained that the Chinese are
profiting from their mining operations, the officials said.
(By Steve Holland and
John Walcott, Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Increase Chisom)
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