US to keep 650 troops in Afghanistan to protect diplomats from insurgent attacks
America
will keep roughly 650 troops in Afghanistan to secure diplomats after the main
US force completes its withdrawal in the coming days.
The
bulk of some 4,000 American troops in the country in recent months will be gone
as early as the first week of July.
Several
hundred other American forces will remain at Kabul airport, helping Turkish
troops until they can set up a more permanent Turkey-led security operation,
Associated Press reported.
Details
of America's future posture in the country were disclosed as Ashraf Ghani, the
embattled Afghan president, visited Washington to discuss details of future US
support.
The
Afghan premier arrived following a string of Taliban battlefield gains that
have raised alarm his government will quickly lose more territory as Washington
departs.
America
is expected to pledge more money and support to the Afghan government, while Mr
Ghani will hope to use the trip to reassure his support base that the country
is not being abandoned.
"At
a time when morale is incredibly shaky and things are going downhill, anything
one can do to help shore up morale and shore up the government is worth
doing," said Ronald Neumann, a former US ambassador to Kabul.
"Inviting Ghani here is a pretty strong sign that we’re backing him."
Mr
Biden has asked Congress to approve $3.3bn (£2.8bn) in security assistance next
year and is sending 3 million vaccine doses to help Afghanistan battle
Covid-19.
Washington
will also urge Mr Ghani and his long-standing rival, Abdullah Abdullah,
"to be a united front" against the Taliban. Mr Biden is also expected
to reaffirm support for negotiations between Kabul and the Taliban, though
analysts say talks have stalled while the militants press their offensive.
American
officials have been clear however that the troop withdrawal will not be
reversed, with a final deadline of September still in place.