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Obama announces 34,000 troops to leave Afghanistan | |
(about 17 hours later) | |
President Barack Obama has announced in his State of the Union speech that 34,000 US troops will leave Afghanistan by early 2014. | |
The move would effectively halve the current US troop levels in the country from about 66,000. | The move would effectively halve the current US troop levels in the country from about 66,000. |
The war in Afghanistan "will be over" by the end of 2014, Mr Obama said, but added the US would continue to help in training and counter-terrorism. | |
Mr Obama did not specify what post-2014 troop levels would be in his speech. | |
The US president and his Afghan counterpart, Hamid Karzai, agreed in January to speed up the hand-over of combat operations to Afghan forces. | |
"We welcome this," Afghan defence ministry spokesman Gen Mohammad Zahir Azimi told the AFP news agency after the speech. | |
"We will take all security responsibilities by the end of 2013," he said. | |
The White House had previously signalled it favoured keeping up to 9,000 troops in Afghanistan after the combat mission ends. | |
"Beyond 2014, America's commitment to a unified and sovereign Afghanistan will endure, but the nature of our commitment will change," Mr Obama said. | |
"We're negotiating an agreement with the Afghan government that focuses on two missions - training and equipping Afghan forces so that the country does not again slip into chaos, and counter-terrorism efforts that allow us to pursue the remnants of al-Qaeda and their affiliates," he added. | |
US troop levels in Afghanistan peaked at about 100,000 in 2010. | US troop levels in Afghanistan peaked at about 100,000 in 2010. |