Trump’s visit was his first to Afghanistan since becoming president.
President Donald Trump made a surprise Thanksgiving visit to US troops in Afghanistan on Thursday and said he believed Taleban insurgents would agree to a ceasefire in America’s longest war.
Trump’s visit was his first to Afghanistan since becoming president and came a week after a prisoner swap between Washington and Kabul that has raised hopes for a long elusive peace deal.
“The Taleban wants to make a deal and we are meeting with them,” Trump told reporters after arriving in Afghanistan after an overnight flight from the United States, kept secret for security reasons.
“We say it has to be a ceasefire and they didn’t want to do a ceasefire and now they want to do a ceasefire, I believe. It will probably work out that way.”
Taleban leaders have told Reuters that the group has again been holding meetings with senior US officials since last weekend, adding they could soon resume formal peace talks.
The Air Force One presidential plane touched down at Bagram Airfield late in the evening on Thursday, with White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien, a small group of aides and Secret Service agents. Two surveillance blimps flew overhead.
Trump met with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and served turkey to some US troops before sitting down to eat Thanksgiving dinner with them. He chatted and had his picture taken with some of the US forces deployed there.
“What a great job you do. It’s an honor to be here,” he said.
Rare war zone visit t was only the second trip to a war zone by a US president who never served in the military and has often derided US engagement in foreign conflicts as costly blunders. He traveled to Iraq in 2018 for a Christmas holiday visit with troops.
Trump was greeted upon his arrival by US Army General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Milley said on Wednesday that a successful outcome from peace talks on ending the 18-year war in Afghanistan could happen in the “near term.”
Trump has wanted to end US involvement in Afghanistan since his days as a presidential candidate.
But talks between the Taleban and the United States collapsed in September after Trump called off a planned meeting with Taleban leaders at the US Camp David presidential retreat, citing a surge in Taleban violence.
The US military says it has ramped up strikes and raids on the Taleban since then, in a bid to pressure the insurgents back to the negotiating table.
Hopes for peace rose earlier this month, when the Taleban released American and Australian hostages.
But Ghani underscored the need for a halt in the fighting, saying on Twitter after meeting Trump: “If the Taleban are sincere in their commitment to reaching a peace deal, they must accept a ceasefire.”
Trump eyes deal ‘or total victory’
There are currently about 13,000 US forces as well as thousands of other Nato troops in Afghanistan, 18 years after an invasion by a US-led coalition following the Sept. 11, 2001, Al Qaeda attacks on the United States.
About 2,400 US service members have been killed in the course of the Afghan conflict.
A draft accord agreed in September would have thousands of American troops withdrawn in exchange for guarantees that Afghanistan would not be used as a base for militant attacks on the United States or its allies.
Still, many US officials doubt the Taleban could be relied upon to prevent Al Qaeda from again plotting attacks against the United States from Afghan soil.
The US military has said it can go down to 8,600 troops and still carry out an essential counter-terrorism mission in a country where both Al Qaeda and Daeshfighters would continue to pose a threat even after any Taleban peace deal.
Trump acknowledged US troop levels were “substantially” coming down but did not provide a specific number.
At the same time, however, Trump suggested he was willing to have US forces stay in Afghanistan for the long-term, if needed.
“We’re going to stay until such time as we have a deal or we have total victory. And they want to make a deal very badly,” Trump said.