US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel. (Associated Press photo)
Jalalabad, Afghanistan:
Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel on Sunday told US troops in Afghanistan their mission was not over as they shift to a scaled-back role training their Afghan counterparts.
At a base near the eastern city of Jalalabad, Hagel said it was crucial the United States and its partners ensure hard-fought progress did not unravel as the US-led force draws down to about 12,500 troops.
"There are challenges ahead. The job's not over. This is still a dangerous country in many ways," he told a gathering of US and Polish soldiers.
"We don't want to see that tremendous progress that's been accomplished... we don't want to see that roll back downhill," he said.
In his last visit to Afghanistan as defence secretary after resigning last month, Hagel flew to Gamberi base to get a first hand look at preparations for a new, much smaller NATO mission that will begin in the new year.
The training ranges from instruction on firing artillery to press relations and countering roadside bombs, officers told reporters.
Preparing for 2016 exit
Hagel said the outpost will serve as "a model" for the mission next year, with several other Train, Advise, Assist Command (TAAC) bases being set up across the country.
The goal was to strengthen the Afghan army and police in time for the complete withdrawal of US and coalition troops in 2016, he said.
"We'll be working ourselves out of a job," said Hagel, who later flew on to Kuwait for the next leg of his overseas trip.
Washington had planned to deploy a maximum of 9,800 soldiers in 2015 but an additional 1,000 US troops will remain in Afghanistan next year to make up for a temporary shortfall in NATO forces, Hagel announced on Saturday in Kabul.
At the peak of the foreign military intervention in Afghanistan four years ago, about 130,000 NATO troops were deployed, following the 2001 fall of the Taliban regime that sheltered Al-Qaeda.
Despite a spate of Taliban attacks in Kabul and record casualties this year among Afghan forces, Hagel and top commanders voiced cautious optimism about the country's prospects under newly-elected President Ashraf Ghani.
"I've seen a huge improvement after the inauguration (of the new president)," General John Campbell, commander of the NATO-led force, told reporters on Saturday.
"It's like a night and day change working with this government, " the general said. "You have a president that has embraced the international coalition, has embraced the Afghan security forces."
US relations with Kabul were severely strained under former president Hamid Karzai, who often blasted American troops and diplomats.
At a base near the eastern city of Jalalabad, Hagel said it was crucial the United States and its partners ensure hard-fought progress did not unravel as the US-led force draws down to about 12,500 troops.
"There are challenges ahead. The job's not over. This is still a dangerous country in many ways," he told a gathering of US and Polish soldiers.
"We don't want to see that tremendous progress that's been accomplished... we don't want to see that roll back downhill," he said.
In his last visit to Afghanistan as defence secretary after resigning last month, Hagel flew to Gamberi base to get a first hand look at preparations for a new, much smaller NATO mission that will begin in the new year.
The training ranges from instruction on firing artillery to press relations and countering roadside bombs, officers told reporters.
Preparing for 2016 exit
Hagel said the outpost will serve as "a model" for the mission next year, with several other Train, Advise, Assist Command (TAAC) bases being set up across the country.
The goal was to strengthen the Afghan army and police in time for the complete withdrawal of US and coalition troops in 2016, he said.
"We'll be working ourselves out of a job," said Hagel, who later flew on to Kuwait for the next leg of his overseas trip.
Washington had planned to deploy a maximum of 9,800 soldiers in 2015 but an additional 1,000 US troops will remain in Afghanistan next year to make up for a temporary shortfall in NATO forces, Hagel announced on Saturday in Kabul.
At the peak of the foreign military intervention in Afghanistan four years ago, about 130,000 NATO troops were deployed, following the 2001 fall of the Taliban regime that sheltered Al-Qaeda.
Despite a spate of Taliban attacks in Kabul and record casualties this year among Afghan forces, Hagel and top commanders voiced cautious optimism about the country's prospects under newly-elected President Ashraf Ghani.
"I've seen a huge improvement after the inauguration (of the new president)," General John Campbell, commander of the NATO-led force, told reporters on Saturday.
"It's like a night and day change working with this government, " the general said. "You have a president that has embraced the international coalition, has embraced the Afghan security forces."
US relations with Kabul were severely strained under former president Hamid Karzai, who often blasted American troops and diplomats.
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