WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump has become increasingly frustrated by the situation in Afghanistan and has recently floated a change in command as he struggles to settle on a new strategy after years of war.
NBC News first reported Wednesday that Trump fumed during a meeting last month over the lack of progress. The network said he also proposed firing Army Gen. John Nicholson, the top US commander in Afghanistan, during the heated Situation Room exchange.
The US has been fighting in Afghanistan for nearly 16 years, but Trump has yet to settle on a new strategy for achieving the goal he inherited from the Obama administration: getting the Afghan government to a point where it can defend itself.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said last month that the administration was âcloseâ to announcing its new strategy â despite blowing a self-imposed deadline â but was still sorting out âthe big ideas,â beyond troop levels and other military details.
âIt just takes time,â he said. âIt wasnât that past presidents were dumb or anything else. This is hard work, so youâve got to get it right. Thatâs all there is to it.â
Mattis said as recently as June that âwe are not winningâ the war. Trumpâs predecessors also struggled with the task of stabilizing the country and bringing US troops home.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders referred questions about the meeting to the National Security Council, which said the presidentâs team âcontinues to develop options for him that address threats and opportunities to America arising from this vital region.â
âThe presidentâs national security team is developing a comprehensive, integrated strategy for South Asia that utilizes all aspects of our national power to address this complex region,â said NSC spokesman Michael Anton in a statement. âThat strategy has been worked carefully in the interagency process and while no decision has been made the presidentâs team continues to develop options for him that address threats and opportunities to America arising from this vital region.â
He declined to comment on details of the classified meeting.
The meeting took place the day after Trump took the unusual step of having lunch with a group of service members whoâd spent time on the ground in Afghanistan to try to brainstorm new ideas for fighting the war.
âIâm going to be talking to you about Afghanistan, what you think, your views,â Trump said as he sat down for lunch, telling reporters, âThese are people on the ground â know it probably better than anybody. â
âWeâve been there for now close to 17 years,â he went on to say, âand I want to find out why weâve been there for 17 years, how itâs going, and what we should do in terms of additional ideas. Iâve heard plenty of ideas from a lot of people, but I want to hear it from the people on the ground.â
According to NBC, Trump brought up the lunchtime conversation at the meeting with senior aides and advisers, comparing the soldiersâ on-the-ground perspective to waiters who know the ins-and-outs of the restaurants where they work. He at one point brought up what he said was an ill-advised closure of Manhattanâs 21 Club restaurant, which he blamed on an expensive consultant.
Trump has long expressed skepticism about expertsâ conclusions, including the US intelligence community and military commanders. âI know more about ISIS than the generals do. Believe me,â he said at one point during his campaign.
Report: Trump fumed about Afghanistan in tense meeting
Updated 03 August 2017
Report: Trump fumed about Afghanistan in tense meeting
