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Obama VisitsTroops in Afghanistan
Fisnik Abrashi, Associated Press
July 19, 2008, 2:29 PM PDT
KABUL, AFGHANISTAN -- Barack Obama visited Saturday with
U.S. troops and Afghan officials in this war-weary nation, the
focal point of his proposed strategy for dealing with threats to
the U.S. if elected president.
While officially a part of a congressional delegation on a
fact-finding tour expected to take him to Iraq, Obama was traveling
Saturday amid the publicity and scrutiny accorded a likely
Democratic nominee for president rather than a senator from
Illinois. Security was tight and media access to Obama was limited
by his campaign, and his itinerary in the war zones was a closely
guarded secret.
Obama, dressed in light khaki colored trousers and a checkered
shirt with his sleeves rolled up, and others in the delegation
received a briefing inside the U.S. base in Jalalabad from the
Afghan provincial governor of Nangarhar, Gul Agha Sherzai, a
no-nonsense, bullish former warlord.
"Obama promised us that if he becomes a president in the
future, he will support and help Afghanistan not only in its
security sector but also in reconstruction, development and
economic sector," Sherzai told The Associated Press.
The area where the meeting took place is not far from where
Osama bin Laden escaped U.S. troops in 2001 after his al-Qaida
terrorist group led the attacks on Sept. 11. With the ousted
Taliban regime resurgent and given the al-Qaida goal of terrorizing
the U.S., Obama has argued that the war in Afghanistan deserves
more attention as well as more troops.
Obama's first overseas tour since securing the Democratic
nomination - he is scheduled to travel to Europe through next week
- could be key to honing his foreign policy strategy with less than
four months before the election. His rival for the presidency,
Republican Sen. John McCain, has criticized Obama for not spending
more time in the region and for developing a policy without more
firsthand knowledge.
In that vein, Obama was expected to meet with Afghan President
Hamid Karzai on Sunday.
Traveling with Obama were Sens. Chuck Hagel, a Nebraska
Republican, and Jack Reed, a Democrat from Rhode Island. Both
military veterans, the senators have been mentioned as potential
Obama vice presidential running mates, although Reed has said he's
not interested in the job and Hagel would be an unlikely
cross-party choice.
At the start of their Afghan trip, the delegation met with top
military leaders and troops at Bagram Air Field, the main U.S.
military base north of the capital, before going to Jalalabad Air
Field in Nangarhar province.
Before departing the U.S., Obama said he wanted to see "the
situation on the ground."
"I want to, obviously, talk to the commanders and get a sense
both in Afghanistan and in Baghdad of, you know, what the most,
their biggest concerns are, and I want to thank our troops for the
heroic work that they've been doing," he said.
A lack of time in the region has not stopped Obama from
proposing significant changes to the war effort in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Obama advocates ending the U.S. combat role in Iraq by
withdrawing troops at the rate of one to two combat brigades a
month. He supports increasing the military commitment to
Afghanistan, where the Taliban-led insurgency is at its strongest
in seven years.
In an interview with German magazine Der Spiegel released
Saturday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called Obama's
suggestion of 16 months "the right timeframe for a withdrawal"
and said U.S. troops should leave Iraq "as soon as possible." His
statement was a sharp contrast to Bush administration policy,
supported by McCain, opposing a set timetable for withdrawal.
U.S. military officials say the number of attacks in eastern
Afghanistan, where most of the U.S. forces in the country operate,
has gone up by 40 percent so far in 2008, compared to the same
period in 2007.
The top U.S. commander in Iraq said Saturday that after intense
U.S. assaults there, al-Qaida may be considering shifting focus to
its original home base in Afghanistan, where American casualties
are running higher than in Iraq.
"We do think that there is some assessment ongoing as to the
continued viability of al-Qaida's fight in Iraq," Gen. David
Petraeus told The Associated Press in an interview in Baghdad.
Obama has expressed frustration with Afghanistan's neighbor
Pakistan's efforts to go after militants in its territory. He
recently said that "If Pakistan cannot or will not act, we will
take out high-level terrorist targets like bin Laden if we have
them in our sights."
That stance may strike a chord with Karzai, who has directly
accused Pakistan's intelligence service of supporting the Taliban
insurgency plotting bombings and other attacks in Afghanistan -
claims that Pakistan, a key U.S. ally in its war on terror, flatly
denies.
But Obama has also chided Karzai and his government, saying it
had "not gotten out of the bunker" and helped to organize the
country or its political and security institutions.
Violence is spiraling in Afghanistan, although foreign troops
numbers are at their highest since the invasion: about 60,000 in
all, including 36,000 Americans. They are bolstered by a steadily
growing number of Western-trained Afghan army soldiers.
Obama has proposed sending two more combat divisions - about
7,000 troops - to Afghanistan. McCain is also advocating sending
more forces to the war-battered country.
As a reminder of the challenges in Afghanistan, authorities
reported Saturday that a roadside bomb killed four policemen in the
volatile south where the Taliban insurgency is centered. A NATO
soldier also was reported killed.
Few citizens in impoverished Afghanistan were aware of Obama's
unannounced visit, and few have been following the U.S.
presidential race, being too busy eking out an existence amid
soaring violence and with limited access to news media.
But some interviewed Saturday said they would welcome an Obama
presidency if he could help their country end the fighting,
corruption and poverty that have crippled it for so long.
"Obama is a good person," said Abdul Basir, 40, a former army
officer. "During his campaign I heard he was saying that if I
become president I will withdraw the U.S. troops from Iraq and
bring them to Afghanistan and I will attack on the terror center on
other side of border (in Pakistan). It is very important and I
appreciated that."
En route to Afghanistan, Obama stopped Friday at Camp Arifjan,
the main U.S. military base in Kuwait and a major gateway for U.S.
soldiers moving into and out of Iraq.
In video released Saturday by the military, Obama said the
troops needed the support of Congress as well as the public and
that it was critical that "we also have a strategy and a mission
that allows you to do your jobs well but is also going to serve the
larger strategic interests of the United States."
Obama played basketball with some troops and joked to those
watching, "You came out here because you wanted to see me get beat
by your fellow soldiers."
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Associated Press writers Amir Shah and Nahal Toosi in Kabul,
Diana Elias in Kuwait City, and Glen Johnson in Washington
contributed to this report.
Copyright © 2008, KTLA
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