U.S SecDef Ash Carter |
by Anisa Shahid
U.S Secretary of Defense (SecDef) Ash Carter said on Monday that he would support a peaceful transition of power but that there was an ongoing need to destroy Daesh not only in Iraq and Syria but also in Afghanistan.
Speaking in an interview forum hosted by The Atlantic on Monday in Washington D.C, Carter said: "...we need to destroy the fact and the idea that there can be Islamic State (Daesh) based upon this ideology and it needs to start there."
"I just want to say that it ...is necessary, it's not sufficient. So, we also need to operate against it and are wherever it arises. Libya, Afghanistan, and so forth and then absolutely we need to protect our own people. And we do that every single day; protect ourselves from attack."
He pointed out that after the 9/11 attacks in the U.S, NATO worked with them in Afghanistan and has been "working with us ever since to make sure that Afghanistan doesn't once again become a place from which attacks on America or France or Germany or the United Kingdown or anywhere else in Europe are launched from."
Carter went on to condemn the recent suicide bombing on coalition personnel at Bagram Airfield that killed two U.S service members and two U.S contractors and injured 16 other U.S service members and one Polish soldier.
He said: "Our deepest sympathies go to the family and friends affected by this tragic loss. So we mourn their sacrifice, we reaffirm our commitment to protect the homeland, and help our Afghan partners secure their country and their future."
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