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US steps up bombing campaign in Afghanistan: Report

A US Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon prepares to refuel as it flies over Afghanistan in support of the military campaign against Daesh, December 29, 2015. (AFP photo)

The United States has significantly stepped up its bombing campaign in Afghanistan to roll back the Daesh terrorists who have expanded their territory outside of Iraq and Syria, according to a report.

US drones and warplanes carried out about three times more strikes in January and February in Afghanistan– dropping a total of 251 bombs and missiles - than they did during the same period last year, the New York Times reported, citing Air Force data.

The widening campaign has been in response to a decision by US President Barack Obama to give military commanders more leeway to launch airstrikes against Daesh positions in several Afghan provinces.

It also comes a little more than a year after Obama declared an end to all combat missions in Afghanistan, sparking a debate in Washington whether the administration should respond to every emerging Daesh threat.

American and Afghan commanders say the strikes have dealt a blow to the terror organization, but they are more concerned about a resurgent Taliban that is stronger now than at any point since 2001.

Under the existing rules of engagement, US commanders can order airstrikes against the Taliban only when the militants pose a direct threat to US forces or Afghan troops.

The US military, however, has been given more latitude in targeting Daesh forces.

US Army General John Campbell, the outgoing commander of US forces in Afghanistan, speaks during a change of command ceremony at Resolute Support headquarters in Kabul on March 2, 2016. (AFP photo)

General John Campbell, who commanded American forces in Afghanistan until earlier this month, said that broader authority has enabled him to take more aggressive measures against Daesh.

Campbell has in recent weeks asked the White House to give him similar authority to strike the Taliban.

The top general recently told soldiers at a US base in Afghanistan that Taliban militants believe “they are operating from a position of strength” in the absence of a robust US military presence in the country.

“So the only thing I can affect is my authority to strike different groups and my authority to provide different enablers to the Afghans,” he said in a recent interview with the Washington Post.

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Friday that President Obama has told him and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Joseph Dunford that he wanted to see Daesh defeated by the end of his term in office.

“That’s what he said he wants,” Carter said at an event hosted by Politico. “He said, ‘Get this done as soon as possible. I’d like to not leave this to my successor.’”

Secretary Carter (C) and Gen. Dunford (R) testify about the Pentagon budget before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Capitol Hill, March 17, 2016. (AFP photo)

Carter and Dunford are in the process of making recommendations to Obama that would expand the US military’s authority in Afghanistan.

Retreating from a major campaign pledge to end the war in Afghanistan, Obama announced late last year that he would keep thousands of US troops in the country past 2016. 


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