- Former Defense Secretary
Mark Esper was hesitant to withdraw additional US troops from Afghanistan, sending a classified memo about his worries to the White House earlier this month, according to The Washington Post. - Esper's reported memo comes as his temporary successor, acting defense secretary
Chris Miller , issued a memo saying, "it's time to come home."
Former Defense Secretary Mark Esper was hesitant to withdraw additional US troops from Afghanistan, sending a classified memo about his worries to the White House earlier this month, according to a Washington Post report published Friday evening.
Esper, who was fired by President
The US's withdrawal agreement with the Afghan government and the Taliban is contingent on a number of factors, including an overall reduction of violence. But following the ceasefire in February, violence in the country has dramatically spiked, prompting US officials to deliver a stark warning.
"I return to the region disappointed that despite commitments to lower violence, it has not happened. The window to achieve a political settlement will not stay open forever," Special Representative Zalmay Khalilzad tweeted on October 27.
The
Trump campaigned on withdrawing US troops from combat operations overseas, tweeting that US forces in Afghanistan would be "home by Christmas!"
Miller's memo, obtained by McClatchy's Washington, DC bureau, explained that "we are not a people of perpetual war — it is the antithesis of everything for which we stand and for which our ancestors fought."
"All wars must end," it added.
Trump's projected replacement, President-elect Joe Biden, has signaled he would be willing to withdraw US forces but only at the right time.
"Americans are rightly weary of our longest war — I am, too," Biden said during a foreign relations panel earlier this year. "But we must end the war responsibly, in a manner that ensures we both guard against threats to our homeland and never have to go back."