Washington announces its strategy on withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan as per US- Taliban agreement. A senior administration official told reporters on Tuesday that all troops will leave Afghanistan by Sept 11 and the withdrawal will start before May 01.
โWe will begin an orderly drawdown of the remaining forces before May 1 and plan to have all US troops out of the country before the 20th anniversary of 9/11,โ the official said.
The US still has 2,500 troops in Afghanistan.
At a hurriedly called virtual conference, the official also said that US President Joe Biden would formally announce the pullout schedule on Wednesday (today).
The proposed schedule is seen as a โmid-wayโ between meeting the May 1 deadline, set in the agreement US and Taliban negotiators finalized in Doha last February, and completely ignoring it.
Soon after entering the White House President Biden had said that it would be difficult to pull all the troops out by May 1, as required in the agreement. Policymakers in Washington hope that the decision to begin the withdrawal before May 1 would be seen by the Taliban as indicating the Biden administrationโs determination to respect the agreement signed by their predecessors.
“But what we will not do is use our troops as bargaining chips in that process”
White House Official said
The official who briefed the media said the president had concluded that โthe best path forward to advance American interests is to end the war in Afghanistan after 20 yearsโ and address โthe global threat picture as it exists today, not as it was two decades agoโ.
He said the objective behind sending troops to Afghanistan was to ensure that the country was not used as a safe haven for launching 9/11-like attacks on the United States and its allies.
โWe believe we achieved that objective some years ago. We judged the threat against the homeland now emanating from Afghanistan to be at a level that we can address it, without a persistent military footprint in the country and without remaining at war with the Taliban,โ the official said.
The US and Nato officials had previously said the Taliban had failed to live up to commitments to reduce violence they made in the February 2020 agreement and that was why the withdrawal was delayed. They also expressed the fear that a total US withdrawal could cause the collapse of the Afghan government in Kabul.
At Tuesdayโs briefing, the senior administration official said that the United States would โremain deeply engaged with the government of Afghanistanโ and would also remain โcommitted to the Afghan people who have made extraordinary sacrificesโ during this conflict.
โWe will stand behind the diplomatic process, and we will use our full toolkit to ensure the future that the Afghan people are seeking has the best chance of coming about,โ he said.
The official said the Taliban have also been warned not to attack withdrawing troops.
โWe have told the Taliban in no uncertain terms that any attacks on US troops, as we undergo a safe and orderly withdrawal, will be met with a forceful response,โ he said.
โAt this point, we have discussed the drawdown with our Nato allies and operational partners. We will remain in lockstep with them as we undergo this operation.โ
Explaining why the Biden administration also concluded that withdrawal was the best option, the official said,
โWe have long known that military force would not solve Afghanistanโs internal political challenges; would not end Afghanistanโs internal conflict. And so, we are ending our military operations while we focus our efforts on supporting diplomatically.โ
The official said the decision followed an extensive review of the US Afghan policy and โwhat emerged was a clear-eyed assessment of the best path forwardโ
The review, he said, concluded that
โthere is no military solution to the problems plaguing Afghanistan and we will focus our efforts on supporting the ongoing peace processโ.
Supporting the process required โputting the full weight of our government behind diplomatic efforts to reach a peace agreement between the Taliban and the Afghan governmentโ.
He said the United States realized the importance of the US- and Nato-led peace efforts โbut what we will not do is use our troops as bargaining chips in that processโ.

