U.S and NATO continue fight against Daesh

U.S Secretary of Defense James Mattis said U.S and NATO continue fight against Daesh

Middle East Press: U.S Secretary of Defense James Mattis said U.S and NATO continue fight against Daesh

Speaking during a visit to Denmark on Tuesday he added in NATO’s fight against Daesh they have noticed the enemy in Afghanistan has lost about two thirds of its strength.

In a joint press conference with Danish Defense Minister Claus Hjort Frederiksen, Mattis said: “In this past weekend, President Ashraf Ghani announced the death of the commander of ISIS in Nangarhar there in eastern Afghanistan.

In our anti-ISIS campaign we are dealing that group one more significant blow with the loss of their leader.

“This fight will go on, as the minister said.

We continue to integrate our military and our non-military efforts. We have to remember that the battlefield that we are fighting on is also a humanitarian field where innocent people live right now, sometimes forced to stay on a battlefield by ISIS,” he said.

According to him, the troops were doing everything possible, “everything humanly possible, to limit the suffering and any casualties among those innocent people.”

He also said they were committed to working together in order to defeat Daesh and that Denmark had always been a stalwart ally of the U.S and the two nations have stood by each other in good and bad times.

Frederiksen meanwhile said that Denmark was considering sending in more soldier to Afghanistan.

“We are open to increasing the number of our forces in Afghanistan if necessary, but we have not yet made the decision,” Frederiksen said the joint press conference after a meeting with Mattis.

“But I can say that we are generally positive about increasing our presence in Afghanistan,” the minister said.

Frederiksen confirmed to Danish news agency Ritzau that Denmark had received a request from the United States of America regarding the increased contribution.

“I have answered that we are looking forward to it,” he was quoted by Ritzau as saying.

“There are problems in Afghanistan, and it is important that we participate,” the minister said.

“So it is quite important that we help stabilize the situation in Afghanistan,” he added.

Denmark has provided military and humanitarian support to Afghanistan since 2002 and currently has about 160 troops and support personnel in Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said on Tuesday night in relation to the fight against Daesh that President Donald Trump is intent on destroying the group.

“The one thing is that there is a difference between Afghanistan proper and our effort to defeat ISIS. And that’s one thing he (Trump) is also very clear on in the campaign, and as president, that he is going to do everything he can to fight radical Islamic terrorism, to root out and destroy ISIS.”

He said in reference to the U.S’s new strategy on Afghanistan that “the goal is always going to be to defeat ISIS, which is something he’s been very clear on with the American people from the get-go. But that all being said, let’s be clear, with the exception of the piece that we announced today, that the president announced yesterday, no decision has been made. So let’s not get ahead of what that ultimate policy will be.”

“The U.S. currently has about 8,400 forces in Afghanistan doing a counterterrorism operation, which is Operation Freedom Sentinel, and then the NATO mission, which is to train, advise and assist under Operation Resolute Support.

The main objective of us being in Afghanistan, (is to stop the country) from being used as a safe haven for terrorists to attack the United States, and our allies. That is the main objective.”

He stated that Trump is weighing up various options in terms of overhauling the whole strategy.

“There are several things that go into a strategy.

 

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