Berlin concerns over troops withdrawal from Afghanistan

Foreign Desk Report

BERLIN: A premature troop withdrawal from Afghanistan may complicate peace talks between the government in Kabul and the Taliban, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said on Wednesday, commenting on U.S. plans to pull out 2,000 troops from the country.
“It remains very important for us not to jeopardize what we have reached so far by taking any rash actions,” Maas said.
The German government is in touch with Washington and the NATO alliance and is looking into what consequences the U.S. withdrawal would have for the around 1,200 German troops still deployed to Afghanistan as part of a larger NATO mission, he said.
“We are especially concerned how the U.S. announcement will affect the peace talks for Afghanistan,” Maas said, adding that the negotiations were already complicated enough and by far not completed.
“In this situation, we should not establish additional hurdles that a premature withdrawal from Afghanistan would certainly bring.”
In the same bid to degrade Trump’s administration decision, other US allies have also voiced alarm at the announcement that a large number of American troops will be removed from Afghanistan and Iraq.
The US is to withdraw 2,500 troops from both countries by mid-January, the US Department of Defense confirmed.
President Donald Trump has long called for troops to come home and has criticised US interventions abroad.
The head of Nato warned of a “very high price”. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called the plan “a mistake”.
Mr McConnell – usually a staunch defender of Mr Trump – also warned the president against making “any earth-shaking changes in regards to defence and foreign policy” before leaving the White House.
Mr Trump is yet to concede to Democrat Joe Biden, and the cuts are scheduled to take place five days before Mr Biden takes office on 20 January 2021.
The president-elect has said he is “rightly weary of our longest war” in Afghanistan but also said there was a need to “end the war responsibly, in a manner that ensures we both guard against threats to our homeland and never have to go back”.
The Biden transition team has not yet commented on the announcement.
In Iraq, the number of US troops will be cut by 500 to 2,500, while the number of service personnel in Afghanistan will fall from 4,500 to about 2,500.