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U.S Brings In Troops To Fight Daesh: report in The TOLO NEWS, 28 July 2016

The U.S military is stepping up its fight in Afghanistan and bringing in troops to fight Daesh in eastern parts of the country, officials said this week.

According to reports, the head of the U.S-led Resolute Support mission in Afghanistan, Gen. John Nicholson, is making use of a special authority given to him recently by U.S President Barack Obama to bring in additional assets, including ground forces, for short-term counterterrorism operations.

He would not say how many extra troops had entered Afghanistan, or the timing of their arrival, but said operations were ongoing.

“If I need to, I can bring in additional assets, and this could be reconnaissance, it could be air assets, it could even be ground assets,” Nicholson said in an interview with the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) this week.

“We brought in additional assets this time and we’ll do it again as needed to defeat” Daesh, he said.

In January, Obama moved to give U.S forces more authority to attack Daesh in Afghanistan. Last month he also agreed to allow military engagement – a move outside of the advise, assist and train capacity troops had been following since the 2014 drawdown.

He also said he plans to slow the withdrawal of troops, leaving 8,400 in the country when his term ends next year, down from around 9,800 troops now.

The additional forces aren’t included in the total because they are members of the military’s global counterterrorism force and will leave Afghanistan after the operation is completed, a senior U.S official said.

Nicholson said such deployments occurred often across the region. “These assets move around across the theater as required by commanders on the ground,” he said.

Nicholson said the additional special operations forces had been authorized for missions that would focus on Daesh strongholds in the districts of Achin and Kot.

He said the first phase of the operation, named Green Sortie, involves airstrikes and missions to kill and capture enemy commanders. He declined to say how many troops were involved, reported the WSJ.

Afghan troops have been carrying out an operation in the Kot district this past week, where they have made steady progress.

The WSJ reports that Haji Hayat Khan, the leader of several anti-Islamic State militias in the east, said American troops had deployed in Kot on Friday.

“We have air assistance from the coalition forces,” he added.

An Afghan security forces commander in the east, Gen. Mohammad Zaman Waziri said the next phase will involve a deployment of Afghan ground forces to clear the area, with close air support provided by the U.S and Afghan air forces.

“For a month, we will target them with airstrikes and special forces operations,” he said in a recent interview. “And then next month, we will launch a ground operation against them.”

Daesh first emerged in districts of eastern Nangarhar province as foreign forces were withdrawing in 2014. Since then, the militant group has sought to expand its presence and recruit more fighters.

Last week the group struck the capital Kabul for the first time, with a suicide attack that killed more than 80 people.

Most of the members attending the meeting made no mention of the South China Sea arbitration but advocated the issue should cool down as soon as possible, Lu said.

More than 80 countries and international organizations have expressed understanding and support to China’s stance on the South China Sea disputes. Only a couple of countries are uttering the “award” is “legally binding and in compliance with international law,” the spokesperson said.

Lu said the few countries should follow the impartial position of the majority of the international community rather than the majority compromises to the minority.

The “award” is invalid from the beginning and runs counter to international law and arbitral practices. China has always safeguarded the international law and hopes Japan will do the same, instead of misinterpreting and distorting the international rules, Lu said.

Some people in Japan might be disappointed with the outcomes of the ASEAN-related foreign ministers’ meetings. Indeed, they have been disappointed with the results of other multilateral events too, Lu said.

He urged these people to calm down and reflect why they have become the small minority on the South China Sea issue. “If they go farther and farther in the wrong way, they will get increasingly disappointed and isolated.”

China hopes Japan can face reality and historical trend, comply with international law and order, and contribute to regional peace, stability, harmony and prosperity rather than the opposite, the spokesperson added.http://www.tolonews.com/en/afghanistan/26462-us-brings-in-troops-to-fight-daesh

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