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Since then, the Pentagon has said there are 14,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, including 3,000 President Donald Trump sent this fall. Previously, the Defense Department had said 8,900 U.S. troops were in Afghanistan.
Despite the pullout of the Marine gunners, U.S. troops are going to be on the ground in Syria for the long haul, defense officials said on Wednesday.
“We will be in Syria as long as it takes to make sure that ISIS is not afforded the ability to re-establish safe havens and conduct attacks,” Pentagon spokesman Col. Rob Manning told reporters on Wednesday. The U.S. presence there “will be determined by conditions on the ground,” he added.
Two defense officials told Foreign Policy the future of the U.S. mission in Syria is still unclear, though it will likely be a mix of counterterrorism operations and stabilization missions. The Islamic State lost its capital of Raqqa in October, but still has 3,000 fighters in eastern Syria and across the border in Iraq, U.S. defense officials say. That will keep special operations forces busy carrying out counterterrorism strikes targeting the Islamic State and any al Qaeda-linked groups in Syria.
U.S. forces will also be on hand to help stabilize areas liberated from the Islamic State. The United States wants to ensure that “sustainable, self-sufficient local security forces” can be established in the mostly Kurdish north and “promote inclusive governance” in those areas, Manning said.
He declined to elaborate, and other defense officials said that planning is just beginning to outline those tasks, which have proven daunting even after more than a decade of U.S. operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.
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