By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 25, 2014 – President Barack Obama marked
Memorial Day with a visit to U.S. leaders and service members at Bagram
Airfield, Afghanistan.
Obama arrived for the unannounced visit last night and is
already on his way back to Washington. It was his fourth trip to Afghanistan
since taking office, White House officials said. He last visited the country in
2012.
The president met with U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan James
Cunningham and Marine Corps Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., the commander of NATO’s
International Security Assistance Force. Dunford gave the president a
battlefield update. Officials on the trip said the president also discussed U.S.
troop levels for the NATO follow-on operation Resolute Support and other
post-2014 plans.
The president met with service members and visited wounded
troops in the military hospital at Bagram. Brad Paisley, a country singer who
accompanied the president, warmed up the crowd for Obama, officials said.
Ben Rhodes, deputy national security adviser for strategic
communications, spoke to reporters on the flight over, according to a pool
report from Air Force One.
Rhodes said that the administration saw the trip as “an
opportunity for the president to thank American troops and civilians for their
service.”
There were no meetings scheduled with either Afghan
President Hamid Karzai or the two candidates in the run-off elections in
Afghanistan, Abdullah Abdullah or Ashraf Ghani. Rhodes said that the White
House wanted to make sure the trip focused solely on the troops and not
internal Afghan politics.
“We have been looking for some period of time to come to
Afghanistan,” Rhodes said. “After the first round of the election, we thought
it would be a good time to come for a troop-focused visit.”
Rhodes said the president will provide some additional
clarity on his thinking about Afghanistan in the next few days.
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