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Trump aide: more Afghan troop cuts in early 2021 by Staff Writers Washington (AFP) Oct 16, 2020 President Donald Trump's national security advisor Robert O'Brien said Friday that US troops in Afghanistan will be cut to around 2,500 in the first two months of 2021. Clarifying the Trump administration's stance after conflicting accounts from the president himself, his advisors and the Pentagon, O'Brien said US troops would be at around 4,500 in the coming weeks, and further reductions would continue after that. "In the early part of next year we're going to be down to 2,500 troops," O'Brien told an online conference of the Aspen Security Forum. He was speaking after Trump said on October 7 he wanted all US troops home from Afghanistan, where they have been fighting for 19 years, "by Christmas" or December 25. That statement could impact the peace negotiations between the Afghan government and the Taliban insurgents, amid their original understanding that Washington would not fully withdraw until there was a solid deal between the two sides. Days after Trump's remarks the Defense Department's top general, Joint Chiefs Chair Mark Milley, appeared to contradict him. Milley said any drawdown past 4,500 was "conditions-based" and depends on progress in peace talks. He said the Taliban needed to honor its pledge to reduce the level of violence, where there had been little change in recent months. On Thursday US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad said the insurgents had agreed to reduce attacks and casualties. Asked about Milley's comments, O'Brien said that as Trump's top advisor, he represents the president's view. "When I'm speaking, I'm speaking for the president," he said. He said Trump's call for troops to be home by Christmas was more sentimental, that all presidents have called for the same thing in past wars. "All presidents .... want the troops home by Christmas," he said. "We're on a path right now that looks like about 4,500 this fall and a smaller number in January-February. But if the conditions permitted, we'd love to get people out earlier," he said. "And I think that's the desire the president was expressing."
Heavy shelling and civilian casualties dash hopes for Karabakh ceasefire Stepanakert, Azerbaijan (AFP) Oct 11, 2020 Hopes dwindled that a Russian-brokered ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan might hold Sunday, with both sides accusing the other of intensive shelling of civilian areas and escalating two weeks of fierce clashes. The two sides had agreed to pause hostilities to exchange prisoners and the bodies of people killed in two weeks of fighting over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. Azerbaijan's foreign ministry said that overnight shelling by Armenian forces of the country's second largest city ... read more
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