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This is an archive article published on July 17, 2016

US support of Afghans could be game-changer: Commander

"The ability to help the Afghan security forces when they are on the offense is really where we want to be, because... that's how they're going to be successful," General John Nicholson said.

Barack Obama, US military, John Nicholson, Afghanistan, General John Nicholson, Gen John Nicholson, US air power, US news, world news, latest news, international news, US Afghanistan, Afghanistan US, US Afghan, Afghan US, Michael S. Clements, US Kabul Obama officially ended the US combat role in Afghanistan in December 2014 but he recently announced that 8,400 US troops would remain when he leaves office in January. (AP Photo/Alik Keplicz)

President Barack Obama’s decision to allow more aggressive US military action in support of Afghan combat operations against the Taliban could have a game-changing effect on the long war, General John Nicholson, the top US commander in Afghanistan, said Saturday.

After prohibiting US forces from targeting the Taliban except in limited circumstances beginning in 2015, Obama shifted course last month and said Nicholson could use US air power and other military assets against the Taliban if it supported offensive Afghan action as part of a strategic campaign plan.

What that amounts to, Nicholson said in an Associated Press interview at his military headquarters in Kabul, is encouragement for the Afghans to stay on the offense.

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“Armies win on the offense,” he said, alluding to longstanding US concerns that Afghan commanders have been too passive, defensive and lacking in aggressive strategies for pursing the Taliban once the militants begin to lose ground.

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“The ability to help the Afghan security forces when they are on the offense is really where we want to be, because when they have the initiative, when they are on the offense, when they are taking the fight to the enemy, that’s how they’re going to be successful,” Nicholson said.

Nicholson said that the attempted coup in Turkey had no impact on the US-led campaign to support Afghanistan in its war against the Taliban.

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He said the international coalition he leads includes more than 500 Turkish soldiers and he is pleased with what he called the professionalism of senior Turkish military officers who supported the government against the coup leaders. He said he believes the Turkish government is “going to be fine.”

Obama officially ended the US combat role in Afghanistan in December 2014. He had intended to scale back the military presence to leave only a contingent at the US Embassy in Kabul, but he recently announced that 8,400 US troops would remain when he leaves office in January. There currently are about 9,800 US troops in the country.

Nicholson said he expects in coming weeks to make increasing use of his wider latitude to support offensive Afghan operations, including as the Afghan security forces turn their attention this month to fighting the Taliban in the east of the country.

Barack Obama, US military, John Nicholson, Afghanistan, General John Nicholson, Gen John Nicholson, US air power, US news, world news, latest news, international news, US Afghanistan, Afghanistan US, US Afghan, Afghan US, Michael S. Clements, US Kabul Ultimately, Nicholson said, this could generate enough Afghan offensive momentum to break the Taliban’s belief that they can prevail and compel them to reconcile with Kabul.

The general said this could include not only more use of US combat airpower but also US reconnaissance and surveillance aircraft and resupply planes. Other officials have said it may include the use of US air controllers on the ground to help pinpoint targets for airstrikes against the Taliban.

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Ultimately, Nicholson said, this could generate enough Afghan offensive momentum to break the Taliban’s belief that they can prevail and compel them to reconcile with Kabul. It’s also true that US commanders in Afghanistan have been asserting for many years that enough military pressure can be put on the Taliban to bring them to the negotiating table, but that has never happened. As recently as 2011 the US had 100,000 troops in Afghanistan.

Also to be overcome is an escalating scale of battlefield casualties suffered by the Afghans. Nicholson said they had about 20,000 casualties last year, which others have said included 5,000-plus killed in action and 14,000-plus wounded. He said casualties in 2016 are running about 20 percent higher than last year.

Those losses, combined with other forms of attrition such as soldiers going AWOL or deserting, have kept the Afghan army under strength for an extended period. Command Sergeant Major Michael S. Clements, the senior enlisted adviser to the Afghan Defense and Interior ministries, said in a separate interview that the Army, which is supposed to have 195,000 soldiers, is listed by the government at about 175,000.

Barack Obama, US military, John Nicholson, Afghanistan, General John Nicholson, Gen John Nicholson, US air power, US news, world news, latest news, international news, US Afghanistan, Afghanistan US, US Afghan, Afghan US, Michael S. Clements, US Kabul “Perceptions of security remain near all-time lows,” a Pentagon report said. Forty-two percent polled in March said they believe security is worse than during the time of the Taliban, which ruled the country from 1996 to 2001. (David P. Gilkey/Detroit Free Press via AP)

“We suspect they’re not as high as that,” said Major General Richard G. Kaiser, commander of the US-led training mission, known as Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan. He was referring to suspicions that a significant number of soldiers and police officers who are listed on the rolls are actually phantoms; they are kept on the rolls so their salaries can be collected by corrupt commanders.

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A Pentagon report to Congress in June said opinion surveys show Afghans feel less secure than at any recent time.

“Perceptions of security remain near all-time lows,” the report said. Forty-two percent polled in March said they believe security is worse than during the time of the Taliban, which ruled the country from 1996 to 2001.

Nicholson, the top overall US commander in Kabul, said he sees many reasons for optimism in light of what he calls a series of events that have boosted the morale of the Afghan military. Among those is the US killing of the Taliban’s leader, Mullah Akhtar Mansoor. He was killed in a drone strike in in Pakistan in May.

He said it “had a more profound impact than even we estimated that it would.”

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“It really demonstrated our commitment to them (the Afghans) and to strike at the enemy,  something we had not done previously, against enemy leadership in Pakistan,” he said.

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