On 9/11, Trump vows to hit Taliban 'harder' than ever

United States President Donald Trump said that the newly intensified US assault on the Taliban in Afghanistan will 'continue'.
3 min read
11 September, 2019
US President Donald Trump warned the Taliban at a 911 memorial ceremony [Getty]
US President Donald Trump warned Wednesday that an unprecedented US military assault against the Taliban in Afghanistan will continue, just five days after he scrapped peace talks with the movement.

Speaking at a ceremony marking the 18th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, Trump said that over "the last four days" US forces have "hit our enemy harder than they have ever been hit before and that will continue".

Trump said the assault was ordered after he canceled secret peace talks with the Taliban over the weekend in retaliation for a bomb attack that killed one US soldier last week.

The announcement comes two days after Trump said that peace talks with the Taliban are over and announced that the US military has dramatically scaled up attacks on the insurgents in Afghanistan.

"They are dead. As far as I am concerned, they are dead," Trump said at the White House about the long-running attempt to reach an agreement with the Taliban and extricate US troops from the country after 18 years of war.

The announcement followed Trump's dramatic cancelation of a secret plan to fly Taliban leaders in for direct talks at the Camp David presidential retreat over the weekend.

Driving another nail into the coffin of what had appeared to be nearly completed negotiations, Trump said that a US military onslaught on the guerrillas was now at its fiercest in a decade.

"Over the last four days, we have been hitting our Enemy harder than at any time in the last ten years!" he said in a tweet.

On Sunday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that "we've killed over a thousand Taliban in just the last 10 days".

Trump angrily denied that the whiplash effect of his sudden shifts on Afghanistan was causing turmoil.

Until this weekend, there had been steadily mounting expectations of a deal that would see the US draw down troop levels in Afghanistan. In return, the Taliban would offer security guarantees to keep extremist groups out.

But then on Saturday, Trump revealed that he had canceled an unprecedented meeting between the Taliban and himself at storied Camp David, near Washington.

He said this was in retaliation for the killing of a US soldier by the Taliban last week.

The cancelation - announced on Twitter - was the first time most Americans learned that such a dramatic meeting was even planned.

Many in Washington were shocked and some were angry that the Taliban had been on the point of visiting the presidential retreat on the eve of the anniversary of the 11 September terrorist attacks.

There was also widespread consternation at the characteristically unpredictable manner of Trump's negotiating style.

Comment: Negotiating with 'terrorists'? How US-Taliban talks expose the mad logic of America's war on terror

But Trump denied any discord among government members including Vice President Mike Pence.

He accused journalists of trying "to create the look of turmoil in the White House, of which there is none".

"A lot of Fake News is being reported that I overruled the VP and various advisers on a potential Camp David meeting with the Taliban. This Story is False! I always think it is good to meet and talk, but in this case I decided not to," he tweeted.

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