"At noon yesterday, President Trump delegated to me the authority to manage troop numbers in Afghanistan. The delegation of this authority, consistent with the authority President Trump granted me two months ago for Iraq and Syria does not, at this time, change the troop numbers for Afghanistan," Mattis told members of the Subcommittee on Defence Hearing on the Department of Defence yesterday.
The New York Times yesterday reported that such an authorisation was granted to Mattis by Trump on Tuesday.
The Pentagon chief, however said that he has yet not decided on the final plan of deploying troops.
"Our overall mission Afghanistan remains the same. To train, advise and assist the Afghan forces so they can safeguard the Afghan people and terrorists can find no haven in Afghanistan for attacking us or others. The revised Afghanistan strategy with the new approach will be presented to the president for his approval in the coming weeks," he said.
The decision to fix troop levels has been by welcomed by Afghanistan as it stated that it firms the commitment towards between the two nations.
"Afghanistan welcomes the decision by President Trump to give Defence Secretary Gen. James Mattis the authority to set US military troop levels in Afghanistan, a development that underscores the United States' strong commitment to our two countries' long-term joint efforts to defeat common enemies and bring about peace and stability," Afghanistan's Ambassador to America Hamdullah Mohib said.
"Daesh (IS), Al-Qaeda and the Taliban along with more than two-dozen other terror groups threaten not just the people of Afghanistan but also the United States and other nations," Mohib said.
Mattis said the US military posture in Afghanistan is part of a larger regional context in South Asia.
"Our primary national interest and the international interest in Afghanistan is ensuring it does not become an ungoverned space from which attacks can be launched against the United States, other nations or the Afghan people," he said.
Responding to questions, Mattis said the Afghan policy of the Trump administration is likely to be announced within weeks.
"I'm talking about within weeks, not months. I will come up and brief you and any of your colleagues," he said.
"I think right now what we have to look at is what kind of capabilities do we bring to them because the Afghans have proven they will fight. They have suffered horrible losses and they keep fighting. They're not fighting as well as they could if we gave them the kind of air support, more intel support that we could give them," he asserted.
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