On 9/11, Trump vows to hit Taliban ‘harder’ than ever

President Donald Trump warned Wednesday that what he
describes as an unprecedented US military assault against the Taliban in
Afghanistan is to continue just five days after he scrapped peace talks.
Speaking at a ceremony marking the 18th anniversary
of the 9/11 attacks, Trump said that over “the last four days” US forces have
“hit our enemy harder than they have ever been hit before and that will
continue.”
Trump said the assault was ordered after he canceled
secret peace talks with the Taliban over the weekend in retaliation for a bomb
attack that killed one US soldier last week.
The precise nature of the US offensive against the
Taliban that Trump described was not immediately clear.
On Monday, Trump had already declared that “over the
last four days, we have been hitting our Enemy harder than at any time in the
last ten years!”
But US troop levels in Afghanistan are only around
14,000, a fraction of the peak of about 100,000 in 2010.
In his Pentagon speech, Trump also issued a threat
against militants ever attacking on US soil again, saying the response would be
unlike any ever seen before.
“If for any reason, they come back to our country,
we will go wherever they are, and use power, the likes of which the United
States has never used before,” he said.
“I’m not even talking about nuclear power. They will
never have seen anything like what will happen to them,” he added.
The warlike comments were all the more startling
because it was only on Saturday that the Republican former businessman
announced on Twitter that he’d been about to meet with Taliban leaders on
Sunday at his Camp David presidential retreat.
Before the tweet, no one outside Trump’s immediate
circle was aware of the development.
It came after months of painstaking, mostly
behind-the-scenes negotiations on cutting back the US troop presence and
extricating the United States from a long, fruitless war.
It was also stunning for the choice of the
prestigious Camp David setting on a date so close to the September 11, 2001,
anniversary.
Trump’s abrupt reversal of that plan and decision to
punish the Taliban for last week’s bomb attack was followed by the sacking of
his controversial national security advisor John Bolton on Tuesday.