At a U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing held in the
day, Senator Chris Coons said that 16 or 17 years in, he is not convinced
that they have a strategy to win.
"I don't think there is a clear path out of Afghanistan and
I worry that the Taliban will simply wait us out regardless of how long we
are there, and as a result we may be there the rest of my life," said
the Democratic lawmaker from Delaware. John Sullivan, deputy secretary of state, and Randall Schriver,
assistant secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific security affairs,
defended the Trump administration's strategy at the hearing, saying that it
was situation-oriented rather than setting a fixed timetable. Tens of billions have been "thrown down a hatch in
Afghanistan," said Republican Senator Rand Paul from Kentucky. Trump unveiled his new Afghanistan strategy in a national
address in late August, in which he called a rapid exit of the U.S. troops
from Afghanistan "unacceptable."
The main change Trump made included taking restrictions off U.S.
forces, which critics said hindered U.S. commanders in the field.
Currently, there are some 15,000 U.S. troops who are reportedly
being deployed in the war-torn country under Trump's plan.
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Source: NDO