From AFT:
“US won’t be asking Taliban
permission to strike terror groups in Afghanistan”
When U.S. Central Command
authorizes strikes against groups like ISIS-K or al Qaida in Afghanistan, they
won’t be negotiating with the Taliban about where and when they can drop bombs.
While the U.S. generally negotiates agreements with countries where it conducts
strikes, the Pentagon considers Afghanistan essentially a free space, following
the collapse of its elected government in August. “We retain all necessary
authorities to execute over-the-horizon counterterrorism operations, and we
remain confident in these capabilities moving forward,” Pentagon spokesman John
Kirby told Military Times on Friday. “Without speaking to specific rules of
engagement surrounding air strikes, there is currently no requirement to clear
airspace with the Taliban, and we do not expect that any future
over-the-horizon counterterrorism strikes would hinge on such a clearance.”
Force protection measures will be
built into any strikes, he added, should the Taliban choose to try to shoot
down an unmanned aerial vehicle or other aircraft. Unfettered access to the
airspace over Afghanistan will be key in the long-distance missions the Defense
Department has promised it will continue, absent troops on the ground. Kirby
would not say whether the “authorities” to strike there were approved by the
Taliban or simply self-bestowed, but for all intents and purposes, the U.S.
government has not been communicating or cooperating with the reinstated
Taliban regime as a legitimate government. Any liaising has been limited to the
mission to continue evacuating American citizens and Afghan allies who wish to
resettle in the U.S. “The strike was a tragic mistake,” Marine Gen. Frank
McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command, told a Pentagon news conference.
As the U.S. gets its bearings in
terms of gathering intelligence without eyes and ears on the ground in
Afghanistan, the DoD is reviewing what might be considered one of the first of
its post-Afghanistan War over-the-horizon strikes: the Aug. 29 Hellfire missile
that targeted ISIS bombmakers, but erroneously killed 10 civilians. CENTCOM
boss Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie told reporters on Sept. 17 that the strike was
not representative of future operations, as it was done in the face of an
imminent threat against U.S. troops outside the Kabul airport. “We will have a
lot more opportunity, probably, than we had under this extreme time pressure to
take a look at the target ... with multiple platforms, to have an opportunity
to develop extended pattern of life,” he said. “None of these things were
available to us, given the urgent and pressing nature of the imminent threat to
our forces.” The Air Force inspector general is currenting reviewing the
investigation into the strike, to see whether any aspect of the process needs
changing, as well as to recommend discipline for any of the authorities
involved. Meanwhile, the DoD inspector general announced Thursday that it would
review the strike independently, to assure all policies and procedures were
followed.
^ The US should not consult the
Taliban or any other Terrorist group in Afghanistan. With that said we are now on
25 days since the American Withdrawal and yet American Citizens and our Afghan
Helpers continue to be abandoned by us over there. ^
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