WASHINGTON:President Barack Obama plans to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan over six months, a senior administration official said Tuesday, on an accelerated timetable that would dispatch several hundred Marines by Christmas.
![]() US President Barack Obama at the White House in Washington October 7, 2009.
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Obama will try to sell a skeptical public on his bigger, costlier war plan by coupling the large new troop infusion with an emphasis on stepped-up training for Afghan forces that he says will allow the US to leave.
The new infusion of troops had been envisioned to take place over a year, or even more, because force deployments in Iraq and elsewhere make it logistically difficult, if not impossible, to go faster.
Instead, Obama directed his military planners to make the changes necessary to speed up the Afghanistan additions, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the details had not yet been announced.
Military officials said at least one group of Marines is expected to deploy within two or three weeks of Obama's announcement, and would be in Afghanistan by Christmas. Larger deployments wouldn't be able to follow until early in 2010.
The initial infusion is a recognition by the administration that something tangible needs to happen quickly, officials said. The quick addition of Marines would provide badly needed reinforcements to those fighting against Taliban gains in the southern Helmand province, and could lend reassurance to both Afghans and the US public.
Obama also will insist that a specific withdrawal scenario be built into the process of adding new forces.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said in a TV interview Tuesday that Obama would lay out an endgame for US involvement.
"We want to - as quickly as possible - transition the security of the Afghan people over to those national security forces in Afghanistan," he told ABC's "Good Morning America." "This can't be nation-building. It can't be an open-ended, forever commitment."
Officials were not specific on the withdrawal date that Obama has in mind nor the changes the military will be required to make to get the troop deployments on the president's timeline.
Obama formally ends a 92-day review of the war with a nationally broadcast address from the US Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.
He began rolling out his decision Sunday night, informing key administration officials, military advisers and foreign allies in a series of private meetings and phone calls that stretched into Monday.
Obama's announcement comes near the end of a year in which the war has worsened despite Obama's previous infusion of 21,000 forces.
But the numbers of fresh troops don't tell the whole story, Gibbs said Tuesday. "It's what their mission is," he told ABC. "We're going to accelerate going after al-Qaida and its extremist allies. We'll accelerate the training of an Afghan national security force, a police and an army."