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Afghanistan and United States Sign Security Deal
A high representative for new President Ashraf Ghani signed a bilateral security agreement (Reuters) with the United States on Tuesday,
which will allow 10,000 U.S. military personnel to remain in
Afghanistan through 2016 after the official combat mission ends in
December 2014. Although former Afghan President Hamid Karzai had refused to sign (NYT)
the deal despite U.S. threats of a full withdrawal, both President
Ghani and Government Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah promised to sign
the agreement during their campaigns. The signing of the security deal
comes a day after President Ghani was sworn in following a power-sharing
deal with Abdullah, his former opponent.
Analysis
"By agreeing to the deal so quickly, President Ghani is resetting a relationship
soured by his predecessor Hamid Karzai, who refused to sign the
agreements, and to the end attacked the US and its forces. The US
ambassador to Kabul, Jim Cunningham, said that Tuesday's signing sent a broader signal to the region about continuing US commitment to Afghanistan," writes David Lyon for the BBC.
"There is an important lesson to be learned here: It's vitally important to keep a substantial commitment
of U.S. troops in Afghanistan after this year. Military commanders are
asking for at least 10,000 personnel, and if that request isn't granted
by the White House (as leaks suggest it may not be), the odds will
increase that Afghanistan, like Iraq, will descend into a civil war that
undoes everything U.S. troops sacrificed so much to achieve," writes
CFR's Max Boot in the Los Angeles Times.
"Our job now is to support Afghanistan
for the Afghans — and to stay committed to a country of people who
believe in a better future with an inclusive government that serves them
all. Even as this political transition concludes and as Afghanistan
takes responsibility for its own security, we must continue to support
that aspiration," writes Secretary of State John Kerry in the Washington Post.
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