President Donald Trump railed against U.S. troop engagement in Afghanistan as a candidate. Now Americans will find out where he stands on the issue now when Trump delivers a policy speech on U.S. military engagement in Afghanistan during an address to the nation Monday night.
The U.S. could decide to send nearly 4,000 more troops to Afghanistan to train and advise Afghan forces in the ongoing counterterrorism fight against the Taliban and an affiliate of the Islamic State group, according to the Associated Press.
Trump’s decision on whether to ramp up engagement in the 16-year conflict is a crucial one, as he won the White House on a policy of reducing engagement in foreign conflicts. President Barack Obama pledged to end the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, but they were still ongoing when he left office, despite an overall drawdown in troops.
Trump was not interested in the prospect of boosting troop levels in the years before he became president.
On Twitter — the president’s most frequent outlet for communication — he started calling for an end to the war in Afghanistan as early as 2011 and continued that push as a candidate. In at least a dozen tweets, Trump criticized the war, sometimes urging Obama to pull out American troops. In other instances, he called the effort a waste of money or of American lives.
Five years ago to the day Monday, Trump called Afghanistan “a complete waste.” He added: “Time to come home!”
In a March 2013 tweet, he said the U.S. “should leave Afghanistan immediately.”
“No more wasted lives,” Trump tweeted. “If we have to go back in, we go in hard & quick. Rebuild the US first.”
Here are just a few of his other tweets criticizing the conflict in Afghanistan:
The White House did not immediately respond to a request to comment on this article.
— The Associated Press contributed to this report