REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
Many of the president's longtime boosters criticized his about-face on Afghanistan, a war he repeatedly pilloried in the years leading up to the 2016 election.
Breitbart
Breitbart
Breitbart
Conservative pundits Ann Coulter and Laura Ingraham both questioned the wisdom of increased troop levels.
Far-right provocateurs who have boosted Trump on different social-media platforms also slammed the speech.
Stefan Molyneux, a far-right podcaster and YouTube broadcaster, highlighted Trump's past calls for troop withdraw from Afghanistan, while internet personality Mike Cernovich mocked the supposed influence of national security adviser H.R. McMaster and adviser Jared Kushner on the policy.
For his part, Trump seemed to acknowledge a reversal on the issue, saying he had gone against his "instinct" was to pull out of the war but that the realities of the position of commander in chief had changed his thinking.
Some of Trump's most loyal media supporters, however, praised the speech and the strategy. The president was almost universally lauded by panelists on Fox News host Sean Hannity's program on Monday night.
On a smaller scale, the split seemed to mirror the reaction to Trump's decision to launch missile strikes in Syria earlier this year.
Supporters on the far right like Cernovich have long maintained skepticism over intervention, while Hannity rattled the sabers for the invasion of Iraq and has espoused hawkish foreign policy views at different points in his career.
GOP Sen. Rand Paul, considered one of the more libertarian-leaning members of Congress, also broke with Trump over his decision to commit more troops to the 16-year-old conflict.
"The mission in Afghanistan has lost its purpose, and I think it is a terrible idea to send any more troops into that war," Paul said in a statement on Monday.
Trump's troop increase comes at a moment when some far-right nationalist personalities have begun to question whether they will continue to offer full-throated support for the presidency, particularly following the departure of former Bannon, who was seen as a primary enabler of Trump's nationalist and isolationist impulses.
"The Trump presidency that we fought for, and won, is over," Bannon said in an interview with the Weekly Standard after his ouster last week. "We still have a huge movement, and we will make something of this Trump presidency. But that presidency is over. It'll be something else. And there'll be all kinds of fights, and there'll be good days and bad days, but that presidency is over."
It doesn't matter who you vote for. The military-industrial complex wins. Only difference: GOP presidents pronounce "Pakistan" correctly.
- Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) August 22, 2017
Who's going to pay for it? What is our measure of success? We didn't win with 100K troops. How will we win with 4,000 more? https://t.co/XHj9GpJzaZ
- Laura Ingraham (@IngrahamAngle) August 22, 2017
Good question. https://t.co/E4qUnxJWa3
- Stefan Molyneux (@StefanMolyneux) August 22, 2017
- Stefan Molyneux (@StefanMolyneux) August 22, 2017
Congratulations to President McMaster!
- Mike Cernovich 🇺🇸 (@Cernovich) August 22, 2017
General Jared. pic.twitter.com/8oI9MVULqf
- Mike Cernovich 🇺🇸 (@Cernovich) August 22, 2017