US president holds crisis meeting on Afghan war
President Barack Obama has met his top Afghanistan war advisors to discuss US plans for a post-2014 military presence in the war-ravaged country.
Obama met Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Marine General Joseph Dunford, the commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan to chalk out a strategy for a long-term US presence in Afghanistan
The meeting come amid a standoff between the US and Afghan leaders over the security agreement.
The fate of the security pact between the two countries remains in limbo as President Karzai refuses to sign it. The Afghan president has delayed signing the pact despite repeated US and NATO warnings.
The White House has warned that if he does not sign soon, it will have to begin preparing to leave no troops behind in the country.
“As each day passes and we move further into this calendar year it becomes more imperative that the Afghan government sign the agreement that was negotiated in good faith so that NATO and the United States can make plans for a post-2014 troop presence,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said after the meeting.
The Afghan president has grown increasingly hostile towards the US government over the security agreement that would allow thousands of American troops to remain beyond the 2014 withdrawal deadline.
Karzai has recently said he saw no good in more than a decade-long American presence in Afghanistan, noting the US-led NATO mission has failed to bring security.
The president also warned that he will not allow continued foreign presence if it means more bombs and civilian killings.
This is while Afghans say American forces are responsible for the death of many civilians in their country.
Thousands of Afghan civilians, including a large number of women and children, have been killed during night raids by foreign forces and CIA-run assassination drone strikes.
Afghan political figures have also slammed on US-led forces for committing unforgivable crimes against Afghan women and children since invading the country in 2001
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