Updated October 28, 2009
Obama Reportedly Eyeing 'McChrystal Light' Plan for Afghan War With Small Troop Boost
AP
Under the pared-down option, McChrystal would be given fewer forces than the 40,000 additional troops he has asked for atop the current U.S. force of 68,000, officials told The Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- President Obama is considering sending large numbers of additional U.S. forces to Afghanistan next year but fewer than his war commander, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, prefers, U.S. officials said.
Such a narrowed military mission would escalate American forces to accomplish the commander's broadest goals, protecting Afghan cities and key infrastructure. But the option's scaled-down troop numbers likely would cut back on McChrystal's ambitious objectives, amounting to what one official described as "McChrystal Light."
Under the pared-down option, McChrystal would be given fewer forces than the 40,000 additional troops he has asked for atop the current U.S. force of 68,000, officials told The Associated Press.
Senior White House officials stressed, however, that the president has not settled on any new troop numbers and continues to debate other strategic approaches to the 8-year-old Afghanistan war. The officials say Obama has not yet firmly settled on the narrowed option or any other as his final choice for how to overhaul the war effort.
Two officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because Obama has not announced his decision, said the troop numbers under the narrowed scenario probably would be lower than McChrystal's preference, at least at the outset. The officials did not divulge exact numbers.
The stripped-down version of McChrystal's plan still would adopt the commander's overall goals for a counterinsurgency strategy aimed at turning the corner against the Taliban next spring.
But that pared-down approach would reflect a shift in thinking about what parts of the war mission are most important and the intense political domestic debate over Afghan policy.
A majority of Americans either oppose the war or question whether it is worth continuing to wage, according to public opinion polls dating to when Obama shook up the war's management and began a lengthy reconsideration of U.S. objectives earlier this year.
Any expansion of the war will displease some congressional Democrats, while Republicans are likely to accuse Obama of failing to give McChrystal all of what he requested.
A stripped-down approach would signal caution in widening a war that is going worse this year than last despite intense U.S. attention and an additional 21,000 U.S. forces on Obama's watch.
Fourteen Americans were killed Monday in Afghanistan in two helicopter crashes, and a spate of roadside bombings Tuesday left eight U.S. troops dead. October has been the worst month for U.S. fatalities since the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan began in October 2001.
Even if McChrystal gets less than he wants from Obama, the U.S. may still end up adding more troops later in 2010. The most likely reason would be to fill voids left by some NATO allies who have been considering troop cutbacks.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates has pushed back hard against a faction of administration officials, led by Vice President Joe Biden, who contend that much of the U.S. national security objective in Afghanistan could be accomplished by concentrating on strikes at al-Qaida along the Pakistan border.
That approach would focus on hunting terrorists with missile-bearing, pilotless drones and could require little or no additional U.S. manpower.
Gates has bridged both sides, officials said. Long wary of a large U.S. presence that could too easily look like an occupation army, he has suggested recently that he could support a carefully designed expansion.
Obama meets Friday with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the military leaders who would have the responsibility for carrying out his strategy decisions. White House officials said the president will continue to consider his options with advisers over the next couple of weeks, adding that other broad war council meetings may still be called during that period.
The White House preference is to announce the troop decision after the Afghanistan's run-off presidential election on Nov. 7, but before Obama leaves for a long and unrelated trip to Asia, four days later on Nov. 11. That timing is not assured, however, and no announcement plan has been settled upon by Obama and his aides, officials said.
Army and Marine Corps units would make up the bulk of any "surge" of U.S. forces, and the identification and training of specific units to be deployed would start soon, in late winter and early spring.
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is on record supporting a troop increase. He has not quantified his preference, but he signed off on McChrystal's assessment of the worsening conditions in Afghanistan and the need for a change in both approach and boost in manpower.
Gates has not given a public opinion on McChrystal's request but has pushed for the commander's overarching strategy during recent weeks of review by the White House, officials said.
"I think that the analytical phase is ... coming to an end," Gates said last week in Europe. "Probably over the next two or three weeks we're going to be considering specific options and teeing them up for a decision by the president. "
As for McChrystal, he already begun carrying out elements of his targeted counterinsurgency plan, which focuses on the volatile south and east of the country and emphasizes protecting civilians even if it means allowing individual militants to escape.
McChrystal's recommendations got broad endorsement from NATO defense chiefs last week, with the suggestion that some nations will increase troops or other resources.
The Friday meeting is the last formal session the president has scheduled to review the situation in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan, a decision-making process that Republican critics say has taken too long.
Latest Politics Video
Most Active In Politics
Most Read
Most Commented
-
Tell Us What You Think About the Health Care Package
March 18, 2010 2,818 comments
-
Obama: 'Procedural' Spat Over Health Bill Vote Doesn't Worry Me
March 17, 2010 1,842 comments
-
House OKs Key Step Toward Health Insurance Overhaul
March 21, 2010 1,593 comments
-
House Votes to Pass Health Care Bill, Send 'Fixes' Back to Senate
March 22, 2010 1,530 comments
-
Kucinich Says He'll Vote for Health Care Bill
March 17, 2010 1,192 comments
Real Clear Politics Poll
| Job Approval | Approve | Disapprove | Spread |
| Obama | 47.4% | 46.8% | +0.6% |
| Congress | 19.0% | 75.8% | -56.8% |
| Direction of Country | Right Direction | Wrong Track | Spread |
| RCP Average | 33.8% | 60.5% | -26.7% |

-
Historic Health Bill Passes
March 22, 2010
-
Obama, Netanyahu to Meet in Washington
March 21, 2010
-
Pawlenty Less Popular in Minnesota
March 21, 2010
-
Big Push to Alter Finance Rules
March 22, 2010
-
Bernanke Assails Giant Firms
March 20, 2010

-
Republicans Plan Broad Attack on Financial Reforms
March 22, 2010
-
Oil Falls Below $80 on Dollar, Greece
March 22, 2010
-
US House Backs Obama's Bid to Revamp Student Loans
March 21, 2010
-
U.S. Healthcare Bill Clears First Hurdle in House
March 21, 2010
-
READ: Obama’s Planned Executive Order on Abortion
March 21, 2010

-
The beloved community
March 22, 2010
-
Staying together for the mortgage
March 22, 2010
-
The worst are full of passionate intensity
March 22, 2010
-
Is the health care light an oncoming train?
March 22, 2010
-
A priest's last mass
March 22, 2010

-
How Safe Is Your Computer Network From Hackers?
March 19, 2010
-
Young Guns: Sing This Well and Learn How to Spell
March 18, 2010
-
New Law Doesn't Help Business Credit Cards
March 17, 2010
-
Olympic Star Johnny Weir on How to Sell 'You'
March 16, 2010
-
'Chemistry' Keeps Music Store Alive in Web Age
March 11, 2010

-
Main Street Fights Wall Street Over Muni Derivatives
March 18, 2010
-
The Accounting Trick That Inflated the Bubble
March 15, 2010 21 comments
-
Greece's Problem? The New York Times
March 09, 2010 4 comments
-
Tired of Bailout Nation?
March 05, 2010 46 comments
-
The Case for Medical Malpractice Reform
March 03, 2010 32 comments

-
How to Steal $100,000,000
March 22, 2010 2 comments
-
More Pointless Government Growth
March 22, 2010 7 comments
-
Good News: Obamacare to Create 16,500 New Jobs!
March 21, 2010 39 comments
-
Evil Insurance Companies?
March 20, 2010 64 comments
-
Bottled Water Hysteria (II)
March 19, 2010 95 comments



recommend

Subscribe to Comments








