In a speech to a joint meeting of Congress, Ghani also thanked the US for development aid and other civilian assistance. And he promised he will be a good steward of continued US assistance to his country as it works to rebuild while struggling against a stubborn insurgency.
"We owe a profound debt to the soldiers who have lost limbs to buried bombs, to the brave veterans, and to the families who tragically lost their loved ones to the enemy's cowardly acts of terror," Ghani said.
Hours before Ghani spoke, at least six people were killed and more than 30 were wounded in a suicide car bombing near the presidential palace in Kabul.
Ghani is untested as a leader, yet he received a warm reception from both Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill. The reason: He's not former Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
Toward the end of his tenure, Karzai did not think the US was holding Afghanistan's interests front and center. He repeatedly railed against the thousands of civilians being killed and said the war against terrorists should not be fought in the villages of his country.
US officials and lawmakers did not think Karzai's comments were appropriate given that 2,200 US servicemen and women had been killed and billions of US tax dollars had been spent during the conflict.
Still, despite being weary of war, lawmakers from both parties praised the White House announcement Tuesday to slow the pace of the US troop withdrawal.
That means the slowdown won't jeopardize his commitment to end America's involvement in Afghanistan before leaving office.
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