President Biden met with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and his former political opponent, Abdullah Abdullah, at the White House Friday to discuss U.S. support for the beleaguered nation as it readies itself to battle the Taliban without the help of U.S. forces on the ground.
Abdullah heads up the High Council for National Reconciliation, which is expected to lead intra-Afghan peace talks with the Taliban.
The Islamist group has made significant gains in the north, overrunning multiple districts and gaining key transportation routes. Traditional Taliban strongholds have been in the south and east. But the U.S. is pressing forward with Biden’s order to remove most U.S. forces, who have been there for 20 years, by Sept. 11, and will likely have forces removed ahead of schedule over the coming weeks.
The president described Ghani and Abdullah as "two old friends" whom he'd met "many, many times" in Afghanistan.
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"The partnership between Afghanistan and the United States is not ending," Biden assured in remarks following the meeting.
"Our troops may be leaving, but support for Afghanistan is not ending in terms of support and maintenance, of helping maintain their military, as well as economic and political support."
Ghani said he respects the U.S.’ withdrawal. "The decision of President Biden has been a strategic decision," the Afghan leader said in remarks following an earlier meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.
"We respect that decision. It's dealing with the new chapter of our friendship, our strategic relationship and our people-to-people relationship and government-to-government relationship that we have focused."
Ghani, in remarks beside Biden following their meeting, said he was "encouraged and satisfied" with the U.S.-Afghani partnership.
"We’re going to stick with you," Biden promised Ghani.
Hours before Ghani’s meeting with the president, the U.S. military launched two drone strikes against Taliban positions in northern Afghanistan, though it isn’t yet clear how many Taliban fighters were killed.
Three more districts fell to the Taliban overnight Friday. Meanwhile, Afghan forces took back six other districts elsewhere in the country in the past 24 hours, according to TOLO News in Kabul.
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Some U.S. officials think Kabul, the nation’s capital, could fall to the Taliban in a matter of months after American forces withdraw.
Biden will also discuss humanitarian assistance with the Afghan leaders, as their nation battles a deadly wave of COVID-19. The administration on Thursday agreed to send three million doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to the nation of nearly 40 million people. Less than 1% of Afghans have been vaccinated.
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Earlier this month the U.S. announced $266 million in humanitarian aid to Afghanistan. The Pentagon’s fiscal year 2022 request includes $3.3 billion for operational support to sustain the Afghanistan Security Forces, officials told Defense One.
Fox News' Lucas Tomlinson and the Associated Press contributed to this report.