WASHIGNTON, July 27: US General Joseph Dunford, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff has said that cooperation from Pakistan was absolutely essential for the United States to be successful in Afghanistan, but warned against putting a timeline for any exit strategy that would undermine support from Islamabad. Gen Dunford made the remarks at the eighth annual Aspen Security Forum held in California from July 19-22. Text of his talk was posted on the institute’s website. He was responding to a question about the ongoing review of the Afghan policy.
He said that the policy review was not just about Afghanistan but about South Asia – from New Delhi to Tehran – and Pakistan had to be a critical element of the US strategy in the region.
“And we cannot be successful in Afghanistan — we’ve seen that over the last several years — unless we have a higher degree of cooperation from Pakistan,” the General told the forum on the concluding day.
Pakistan was absolutely an integral part of the strategic review that was ongoing, he added.
Asked about the future of Taliban in any future solution to the Afghan problem, Gen Dunford stated that the political solution in Afghanistan had to be an Afghan-led solution for it to be successful, but how Taliban were to be accommodated politically had to be an Afghan decision to make.
About the increase in ground troops in Afghanistan, he said the US should only provide more capability on the ground if it was in the context of a broader strategy that had a chance of being successful. From 140,000 in 2013, the number of US troops in Afghanistan currently stands at about 8,700 and President Trump has authorized the Pentagon to decide on the need of sending any additional forces as has been requested by US military chief in that country. – DNA