US to Send More Troops to Afghanistan
It will be the largest deployment of US troops
outside major bases in Afghanistan since the end of the NATO combat
mission in 2014, the Houston Chronicle reported.
Though the military insists that the soldiers will
not take active combat roles, US Special Operations forces have
increasingly been drawn into the fighting in Helmand as one important
district after another has fallen or been threatened by Taliban.
Col. Michael T. Lawhorn, a spokesman for the US
military in Afghanistan, said in a statement that the new deployment
would provide protection for the current Special Operations troops in
Helmand and give extra support and training for the 215th Corps of the
Afghan National Army.
Afghan forces in Helmand have taken heavy casualties in recent months and have been cut off by the Taliban in many places.
"Our mission," Lawhorn said, "remains the same: to
train, advise, and assist our Afghan counterparts, and not to
participate in combat operations."
He would not detail the number of troops or the
unit involved in the deployment, citing Pentagon policy. But a senior US
military official speaking on the condition of anonymity said the unit
being sent to Helmand, the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry, was slightly
smaller than the usual battalion size of 700 to 800 soldiers.
The new troops will replace another unit that was
already in Afghanistan, the official said, and will not add to the total
number of US troops in the country, which stands at roughly 9,800
service members.
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