"I'm not saying that's the preferred option; I'm just saying to suggest otherwise would be to make assumptions about negotiations that have not reached a conclusion," White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters at his daily news conference.
"We do have an enduring commitment to Afghanistan. And whether we have a residual force there or not, that commitment will continue. The commitment will continue through our Strategic Partnership Agreement, it will continue through a security relationship which will involve our efforts to continue to go after the remnants of al-Qaida in the region and to help train and equip the Afghan security forces," Carney said in response to a question.
The so called "zero option" will end US military involvement in Afghanistan.
Carney said no decision has been made on the number of troops in Afghanistan post 2014 and it is not coming soon.
US President Barack Obama, he said, will be discussing with his national security team the issue of a potential residual force post-2014.
"The range of options depends on a number of things," he said.
"The two policy objectives we have when it comes to a post-2014 security relationship have to do with continuing to counter the remnants of al-Qaeda and to continue to train and equip -- train and equip the Afghan National Security Forces.
"We have discussions going with the Afghans about a bilateral security agreement, we have a very important strategic partnership agreement that we continue to implement with them that has to do with our substantial commitment to Afghanistan and Afghanistan's future, including a strong civilian component," Carney said.
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