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Dunford visits Afghanistan to review US military campaign

AP  |  Bagram Air Base 

The top US officer visited today to evaluate the campaign and ensure new American advisory teams and an upgraded are on target as the next fighting season with the looms.

Gen Joseph Dunford, of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he wants to understand the goals for the coming months so the US-led coalition can develop ways to measure progress in the fight.

Dunford told reporters traveling with him that he seeks "a discussion about measures of effectiveness." A key question, Dunford said, is how the US will know that it's where it needs to be in implementing what is, in actuality, the Afghans' plan.

The idea of benchmarks for progress in the Afghan war has been simmering for several months as the looks to end America's longest war.

Measuring success will be a key part of discussions this summer when looks for a one-year assessment of his new regional strategy. Last August, a reluctant Trump had to be persuaded to inject new U.S. troops to the conflict, which is now in its 17th year.

"The intent really is to get my own assessment of what we can expect over the next couple months," said Dunford, who commanded U.S. and coalition forces in from February 2013 to August 2014. He said a major focus will be ensuring Gen. John Nicholson, the top U.S. in Afghanistan, has the resources he needs.

Dunford's visit comes on the heels of a two-day stop in last week by amid talk of a renewed push to get fighters to the peace table with the

The increased US campaign is seen as part of that effort. It includes hundreds of additional trainers and advisers who will work with Afghan troops closer to the fight, with the goal of turning the corner on what has been a stubborn stalemate with the and other insurgent groups. About five weeks ago, the Army's new training brigade deployed to with about 1,000 soldiers.

It included close to 600 trainers and advisers and hundreds of security forces and other support personnel. The so-called is part of the broad new strategy that has pushed the Afghan conflict back to the top of the Pentagon's warfighting priority list.

In addition to troops, the U.S. has also sent more intelligence and surveillance aircraft, attack planes, and and rescue aircraft to the fight. Many of those resources have been shifted from and Syria, where the battle against Islamic State group militants is waning.

The US also is providing more fighter aircraft and other support to the while increasing the number of American forces on the ground to more than 14,000.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, March 19 2018. 22:35 IST
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