Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- President Barack Obama,
speaking early Wednesday in Afghanistan at the tail end of a surprise
visit there, discussed how the war will end and promised a steady
drawdown of U.S. troops.
Obama committed to
pulling 23,000 troops out of the country by the end of summer and
sticking to the 2014 deadline to turn security fully over to the Afghan
government. He said that NATO will set a goal this month for Afghan
forces to be in the lead for combat operations next year.
"We will not build
permanent bases in this country, nor will we be patrolling its cities
and mountains. That will be the job of the Afghan people," the president
said during a speech at Bagram Air Base.
His unannounced trip was
Obama's third visit to Afghanistan since taking office. It coincided
with the first anniversary of the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden
in neighboring Pakistan, and comes as Obama is fighting for re-election.
Hours after Obama left
the country, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force
reported a loud explosion in the capital, Kabul.
Gen. Mohammad Ayoub
Salangi, Kabul chief of police, told CNN it was a suicide car bomb. The
blast killed five people outside a compound known as Green Village,
according Sediq Seddiqi, a spokesman for Afghan Interior Ministry. An
undetermined number of others also were injured.
The president promised
not to keep troops in harm's way "a single day longer than is absolutely
required for our national security," but promised to "finish the job"
and "end this war responsibly."
Obama spoke of a
"negotiated peace," and said his administration has been in direct talks
with the Taliban. "We've made it clear that they can be a part of this
future if they break with al Qaeda, renounce violence, and abide by
Afghan laws," he said.
Finally, the president vowed: "This time of war began in Afghanistan, and this is where it will end."
Earlier in his trip,
Obama and Afghan President Hamid Karzai signed an agreement outlining
cooperation between their countries once the U.S.-led international
force withdraws in 2014.
Some U.S. forces will
remain in a post-war Afghanistan as military advisers, but both U.S. and
Afghan officials have yet to decide how many troops will continue
supporting the Afghan military, and for how long.
At a signing ceremony
for the Strategic Partnership Agreement, Obama said that neither country
asked for the war that began more than a decade ago, but now they would
work in partnership for a peaceful future.
"There will be difficult
days ahead, but as we move forward in our transition, I'm confident
that Afghan forces will grow stronger; the Afghan people will take
control of their future," Obama said.
Addressing a concern in
Afghanistan that the United States will abandon the country once its
troops leave, Obama said, "With this agreement, I am confident that the
Afghan people will understand that the United States will stand by
them."
He later added that the
United States "did not come here to claim resources or to claim
territory. We came here with a very clear mission to destroy al Qaeda,"
referring to the terrorist organization responsible for the September
11, 2001, attacks.
Obama's address came
nine years to the day after then-President George W. Bush delivered his
"Mission Accomplished" speech aboard the aircraft carrier USS Abraham
Lincoln, announcing the end of major combat operations in Iraq.
Karzai offered his
thanks to the American people for helping Afghanistan, and the
presidents shook hands after signing the document in the atrium of the
King's Residence, part of the Presidential Palace in Kabul.
"This agreement will
close the season of the past 10 years and is going to open an equal
relationship season. With the signing of this agreement, we are starting
a phase between two sovereign and independent countries that will be
based on mutual respect, mutual commitments and mutual friendship,"
Karzai said.
Obama warned the Afghan
people and, later, U.S. troops he met with, of difficult days ahead. In
remarks to troops at Bagram, Obama sounded emotional as he said that
soldiers could see friends get hurt or killed as the mission winds down.
"There's going to
heartbreak and pain and difficulty ahead, but there's a light on the
horizon because of the sacrifices you've made," he said.
The security risks in
Afghanistan were evident from the secretive nature and timing of the
trip. Obama landed in Afghanistan in the cover of darkness, and the
signing ceremony occurred in the late evening.
Back in the United
States, politicians reacted to the president's visit -- some with
praise, others claiming it was politically motivated.
Presumptive GOP
presidential nominee Mitt Romney said, "I am pleased that President
Obama has returned to Afghanistan. Our troops and the American people
deserve to hear from our president about what is at stake in this war.
Success in Afghanistan is vital to our nation's security. It would be a
tragedy for Afghanistan and a strategic setback for America if the
Taliban returned to power and once again created a sanctuary for
terrorists."
Sen. James Inhofe, R-Oklahoma, was less supportive.
"Clearly, this trip is
campaign-related. We've seen recently that President Obama has visited
college campuses in an attempt to win back the support of that age group
since he has lost it over the last three years. Similarly, this trip to
Afghanistan is an attempt to shore up his national security
credentials, because he has spent the past three years gutting our
military," he said in a statement.
The Strategic
Partnership Agreement provides a framework for the U.S.-Afghanistan
partnership for the decade after the U.S. and allied troop withdrawal,
according to senior administration officials who briefed reporters on
the flight.
Specific levels of U.S.
forces and funding are not set in the agreement and will be determined
by the United States in consultation with allies, the officials said on
condition of not being identified.
Noting the anniversary of the bin Laden mission, the officials called it a resonant day for the Afghan and American people.
More than 130,000 troops
from 50 countries serve in Afghanistan, according to the NATO-led
International Security and Assistance Force. The United States is the
biggest contributor, providing about 90,000 troops, followed by the
United Kingdom (9,500), Germany (4,800) and France (3,600).
The war that began in
2001 is increasingly unpopular in the United States, with the latest
CNN/ORC International poll in late March showing 25% of respondents
supporting it and 72% opposing it.
More than 2,700 troops from the United States and its partners have died in the war, the majority of them American.
In 2011, the United
States outlined its plan to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan by the
end of 2014. The move was followed by withdrawal announcements by most
of the NATO nations.
Last week, Afghan
National Security Adviser Rangin Daftar Spanta and U.S. Ambassador Ryan
Crocker initialed a text that outlined the kind of relationship the two
countries want in the decade following the NATO withdrawal.
The deal had been long
expected after Washington and Kabul found compromises over the thorny
issues of "night raids" by U.S. forces on Afghan homes and the transfer
of U.S. detainees to Afghan custody.
It seeks to create an
enduring partnership that prevents the Taliban from waiting until the
U.S. withdrawal to try to regain power, the senior administration
officials said.
Obama visited
Afghanistan in March 2010 and returned in December of the same year. He
also visited Afghanistan in 2008 as a presidential candidate.
CNN's Tom Cohen, Barbara Starr, Keating Holland, Nick Paton Walsh and journalist Masoud Popalzai contributed to this report.
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