• Web
  • Humsa
  • Videos
  • Forum
  • Q2A
rabia shakeel : meri dua hai K is bar imran khan app is mulk k hukmaran hun To: suman(sialkot) 10 years ago
maqsood : hi how r u. To: hamza(lahore) 11 years ago
alisyed : hi frinds 11 years ago
nasir : hi To: wajahat(karachi) 11 years ago
khadam hussain : aslamoalikum pakistan zinsabad To: facebook friends(all pakistan) 11 years ago
Asif Ali : Asalaam O Aliakum . To: Khurshed Ahmed(Kashmore) 11 years ago
khurshedahmed : are you fine To: afaque(kashmore) 11 years ago
mannan : i love all To: nain(arifwala) 11 years ago
Ubaid Raza : kya haal hai janab. To: Raza(Wah) 11 years ago
qaisa manzoor : jnab AoA to all 11 years ago
Atif : Pakistan Zinda bad To: Shehnaz(BAHAWALPUR) 11 years ago
khalid : kia website hai jahan per sab kuch To: sidra(wazraabad) 11 years ago
ALISHBA TAJ : ASSALAM O ELIKUM To: RUKIYA KHALA(JHUDO) 11 years ago
Waqas Hashmi : Hi Its Me Waqas Hashmi F4m Matli This Website Is Owsome And Kois Shak Nahi Humsa Jaise Koi Nahi To: Mansoor Baloch(Matli) 11 years ago
Gul faraz : this is very good web site where all those channels are avaiable which are not on other sites.Realy good. I want to do i..... 11 years ago
shahid bashir : Mein aap sab kay liye dua'go hon. 11 years ago
mansoor ahmad : very good streming 11 years ago
Dr.Hassan : WISH YOU HAPPY HEALTHY LIFE To: atif(karachi) 11 years ago
ishtiaque ahmed : best channel humsa live tv To: umair ahmed(k.g.muhammad) 11 years ago
Rizwan : Best Streaming Of Live Channels. Good Work Site Admin 11 years ago
Pentagon favors Afghan phased pullout over 3 years
Source: The News | 12-02-2013

The Pentagon is pushing a plan that would keep about 8,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan once the NATO military mission there ends in 2014 but significantly shrink the contingent over the following two years, according to senior U.S. government officials and military officers, said a report published in Washington Post.



The phased-reduction approach, which would define the shape of the United States’ endgame in Afghanistan, represents an effort to strike a compromise between top military commanders, who had wanted to base about 10,000 U.S. troops in the country after 2014, and several of President Obama’s senior civilian advisers, who have been advocating a far smaller long-term U.S. presence.



Military commanders fear that a drastic reduction in forces will erode hard-won battlefield gains, while administration officials worry that a large, enduring troop presence will come at too great a cost in dollars and lives.



Although a consensus is emerging among White House and Pentagon officials about the merits of a phased reduction, Obama’s top aides and military commanders have not coalesced around the size of the trims, said the officials and officers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal policy deliberations.



The proposals under consideration call for reducing the U.S. presence by early 2016 to between 3,500 and 6,000 troops. One option under serious discussion envisages further reducing troop levels to under 1,000 by early 2017, with most of the personnel operating from the giant U.S. Embassy in Kabul.



Under that option, elite Special Operations commandos would not be based in Afghanistan after 2016, senior military officials said. They would swoop into the country from ships or bases in nearby nations to conduct counterterrorism missions, operating from facilities run jointly with Afghan forces.
Prior to discussions about the phased reduction, White House officials had been considering plans to reduce the U.S. presence to as few as 2,500 troops by January 2015.



Military commanders would prefer to retain as many as 3,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan in 2017 and beyond, but they appear to be willing to accept White House demands to keep the number under 1,000.We can live with this,” said a senior U.S. official aligned with the military leadership. A smaller troop presence in 2017 “doesn’t really matter so long as you have the upfront guys for the first year.”



The commanders have argued that a large enduring force is necessary to support Afghanistan’s army, which lacks many critical tools, including combat aircraft and medical evacuation helicopters, to aid soldiers fighting the Taliban. But White House advisers, and even some senior civilian officials in the Pentagon, have been skeptical that a few thousand more U.S. troops would be able to help transform the much-troubled Afghan army into an effective fighting force.



Once the White House and Pentagon reach a formal agreement, it will be presented to the Afghan government, which must grant permission for U.S. forces to operate in the country after 2014. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has voiced support for a continued U.S. military presence, though the decision — and the provision of immunity to American forces — may require the consent of the country’s often-fractious parliament.



 

Related News
Source: GEO News | 13-06-2013
Syria rebels seize key army position in Hama: NGO BEIRUT: Syrian rebels seized on Thursday a key army position in the central province of Hama, which lies on the road linking Damascus to Aleppo in the north, a monitoring group said Thursday. The military responded by deploying en masse to try to take back the position at Morek and began shelling it, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights added. &..... Read more
Source: Samaa News | 01-04-2013
Italy president under fire for ignoring women in Italian President Giorgio Napolitano faced criticism on Sunday for failing to name any women to the 10-strong "wise men" panel of experts he appointed to help find a way out of the political deadlock created by last month's election. The group of advisers, including a former head of the constitutional court, the chief of statistics agency ISTA..... Read more
Source: The News | 19-03-2013
Obama to meet four African leaders in March US President Barack Obama will welcome four African leaders to Washington this month, the White House said Monday. Obama on March 28 will meet with the president of Senegal, Macky Sall; of Sierra Leone, Ernest Bai Koroma; of Malawi, Joyce Banda; and the prime minister of Cape Verde, Jose Maria Pereira Neves.Spokesman Jay Carney said the leaders will di..... Read more
Latest News
Source: Dunya News | 06-05-2014
Source: Dunya News | 06-05-2014
Source: Dunya News | 05-05-2014
Source: Dunya News | 05-05-2014