American Forces Press Service
KABUL, Afghanistan, April 22, 2012 – The
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
will focus on progress in Afghanistan’s national security forces during
a visit here.
Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey arrived this
evening, and after a private dinner with a small group of field grade officers,
met for about an hour with Marine Corps Gen. John R. Allen, commander of the
International Security Assistance Force.
Discussions here also will center on
Allen’s plan to draw down the U.S. presence in Afghanistan to 68,000 troops by
the end of September, the chairman told American Forces Press Service during
the flight here from Amman, Jordan.
Dempsey’s visit to Afghanistan comes
between last week’s meetings in Belgium among NATO foreign and defense
ministers and the alliance’s summit in Chicago next month.
“The ministers get together and provide
[the defense chiefs] with political guidance, and we discuss how we turn that
into military advice and planning,” the chairman explained. But the summit will
focus on the way ahead after 2014, when Afghan forces will have security
responsibility for all of Afghanistan, he added.
In the meantime, Dempsey said, the key
for military leaders is to work along with their Afghan partners to ensure
Afghanistan’s national security forces continue their progress toward full
security responsibility and to work together in addressing the challenges that
lie ahead in that effort.
Earlier today, Dempsey met in Amman with
Lt. Gen. Mashal al-Zaben, Jordan’s defense chief. They discussed the
long-standing U.S. Jordanian partnership and regional security issues, including
Jordan’s perspective on the situation in neighboring Syria.
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