Summary
18 February 2009
President Obama is ordering the deployment of seventeen thousand extra troops to Afghanistan. In a statement he said they were needed to stabilise a deteriorating situation.
Reporter:
Justin Webb
Report
This is the first big military decision from the new White House team. In a written statement, Mr Obama said Afghanistan had not received the strategic attention, direction and resources it urgently required.
Speaking on Air Force One, the president's spokesman Robert Gibbs suggested that the extra troops were sorely needed in order to address an immediate crisis combating a deteriorating situation ahead of a Taleban spring offensive.
In the longer term though it's not yet clear what the president intends to do about Afghanistan. In advance of a visit to Canada he told a Canadian TV interviewer that he thought the war was still winnable, al-Qaeda could still be stamped out. On the other hand he said the spread of extremism could not be stopped solely through military means, diplomacy and development were also important.
He may well add to the seventeen thousand troop reinforcements, his commanders would like more, but the president has yet to decide on a long term plan.
Justin Webb, 大象传媒 News, Washington
Grammar
- the new White House team
the people working for President Obama
- strategic
well planned in advance
- Air Force One
the US President's private aircraft (sometimes referred to as 'the flying White House')
- sorely needed
absolutely necessary
- combating a deteriorating situation
trying to prevent a bad situation from getting even worse
- spring offensive
a military attack taking place in the spring
- winnable
with the possibility of being victorious
- stamped out
destroyed
- solely through military means
using only the armed forces
- reinforcements
soldiers sent to make the army stronger