Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said the United States might want to "re-examine" the timetable for removing the remaining U.S.-led coalition troops from the country by the end of 2016. The president said he was concerned about a potential threat from the armed group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
"Deadlines concentrate the mind. But deadlines should not be dogmas," Ghani said when asked about the issue in an interview broadcast Sunday on the CBS program "60 Minutes."
"If both parties, or, in this case, multiple partners, have done their best to achieve the objectives and progress is very real, then there should be willingness to re-examine a deadline," added Ghani, who was elected last year.
Asked if he had told that to U.S. President Barack Obama, Ghani said, "President Obama knows me. We don't need to — to tell each other."
The White House National Security Council, the State Department and the Pentagon had no immediate comment.
Afghanistan assumed full responsibility on Thursday for security from departing foreign combat troops, in a test of the readiness of 350,000 Afghan forces who will bear responsibility for fighting Taliban insurgents.
The U.S.-led coalition troops formally ended their combat mission more than 13 years after the Islamist Taliban government was toppled in late 2001 for sheltering the planners of the attacks on the U.S. of Sept. 11, 2001.
About 13,000 foreign troops, mostly Americans, will remain in the country to train Afghan troops under a two-year mission, Resolute Support.
At least 3,188 Afghan civilians were killed in the intensifying war with Taliban insurgents in 2014, making it the deadliest year on record for noncombatants, the United Nations said in a recent report.
Ghani said he was concerned about ISIL and its potential threat to Afghanistan "because the past has shown us that threats, that networks change their form." The group has taken over parts of Iraq and Syria.
But U.S. Gen. John Campbell, who leads the remaining coalition forces in Afghanistan, said in an interview on the same program that he did not see ISIL "coming into Afghanistan like they did into Iraq. The Afghan Security Forces would not allow that."
Reuters
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