US Defence Secretary James Mattis was tight-lipped yesterday as speculation raged over the US strategy on Afghanistan.
Speaking to reporters travelling with him to the Middle East, Mr Mattis would say only that Friday’s top-level strategy meeting at the Camp David presidential retreat was “rigorous and inclusive.”
Sources said Mr Mattis, Vice-President Mike Pence and National Security Adviser HR McMaster all pushed for sending thousands more troops — with the Taliban stronger than ever after 16 years of war.
No announcement was made after the meeting. On Saturday US President Donald Trump tweeted only that there were “Many decisions made, including on Afghanistan.”
Last week the Taliban wrote an open letter to Mr Trump urging him to end the war he long opposed.
Mr Trump’s special adviser Steve Bannon dramatically left his White House job on Friday, days after insisting that any military option against North Korea would be disastrous.
Mr Bannon was also reportedly in favour of a US withdrawal from Afghanistan, and described Mr McMaster as the leader of the “globalist empire project.”
On Friday Mr Bannon told the Weekly Standard: “The Trump presidency that we fought for, and won, is over.” He will return to his old job as executive chairman of Breitbart News.
Last week the Congressional black, hispanic, Asian and progressive caucuses urged Mr Trump to sack Mr Bannon and two other advisers for alleged links to the far-right in the wake of the Charlottesville march where anti-fascist counter-protester Heather Heyer was murdered.
American Civil Liberties Union board member garland Nixon said: “He’s going to have the opportunity to say whatever he wants, because the microphones will be chasing him around."