November 19, 2020
1 min read

NATO chief, Ghani discuss troop withdrawal

Wednesday’s development come as US plans to pull out 2,000 troops from Afghanistan by mid-January…reports Asian Lite News

In a phone call, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani discussed the troops level adjustment in the war-torn country, as well as the peace process which is currently at an impasse.

Confirming the phone conversation on Wednesday, Afghan presidential spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said: “Both sides talked about the Afghan peace process and NATO’s continued support to train, advise and assist the Afghan forces in their fight against terrorism,” TOLO News reported.

Taking to Twitter, the NATO chief said: Spoke with Ashraf Ghani on the situation in Afghanistan where it has been a long and hard road towards the peace talks. They are fragile but offer the best chance for peace. NATO remains committed to Afghanistan’s security.

“We support the Afghanistan peace process and as part of it we’ll continue to adjust our presence.

“Even with the US reduction, NATO will continue to train, advise and assist the Afghan forces in their fight against international terrorism.”

Wednesday’s development come as US plans to pull out 2,000 troops from Afghanistan by mid-January.

Countries in the region, including Pakistan, Iran and Russia have also asked for a responsible withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan.

Also read:Asian Lite Daily Digital – November 18, 2020 – NATO Warns Against Troop Withdrawal…

Previous Story

US appoints new Venezuela envoy amid clashes

Next Story

US States Plan More Testing in Students Before Thanksgiving

Latest from -Top News

UK, Germany, Jordan call for ceasefire in Sudan

Foreign ministers warn of ‘apocalyptic’ crisis in Sudan as El-Fasher falls. UK announces further £5 million of humanitarian support in response to the violence   Foreign ministers of Germany, Jordan and the

Torkham opens partially

Pakistan eases its three-week border shutdown with Afghanistan to allow refugee returns, but trade remains halted as fragile ceasefire diplomacy struggles to contain wider tensions. Pakistan has partially reopened the Torkham border
Go toTop