Mattis yesterday said the "delegation of authority" letting the Pentagon set troop levels in Afghanistan would give the military greater agility in conducting operations.
Unlike his predecessor Barack Obama, who kept battlefield commanders on a tight leash and scrutinized each deployment down to the individual soldier, President Donald Trump has been happy to defer his warfighting policy to his top brass -- the men he likes to call "my generals."
Currently about 8,400 US troops are in Afghanistan along with another 5,000 or so NATO forces.
"This administration will not repeat the mistakes of the past," Mattis said in a statement.
"We cannot allow Afghanistan to once again become a launching point for attacks on our homeland or on our allies," Mattis said. He was alluding to the former Taliban government's granting haven to Al-Qaeda in the runup to the September 11, 2011 terror attacks in New York and Washington.
Earlier, Mattis told lawmakers that he would present Trump with a new US military strategy for Afghanistan by mid- July.
"Together in the interagency, we will define the way ahead and I will set a US military commitment consistent with the commander in chief's strategic directions and his foreign policy, as dictated by Secretary of State Tillerson," Mattis told lawmakers during a hearing at the Senate Appropriations Committee.
Mattis said the decision would come in consultation with other US government agencies in a more comprehensive approach to the conflict.
Prior to the White House decision, Mattis had warned that the Taliban was surging -- having claimed a series of deadly attacks, including against Afghan military bases and positions -- and that America still was "not winning" in the country nearly 16 years after the US-led invasion there.
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