White House denies troops decision is imminent

The White House tonight dismissed suggestions by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown that President Barack Obama was close to announcing a decision on the deployment of more troops to Afghanistan.

White House denies troops decision is imminent

The White House tonight dismissed suggestions by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown that President Barack Obama was close to announcing a decision on the deployment of more troops to Afghanistan.

In the House of Commons, Gordon Brown told MPs that he had spoken to Mr Obama and expected him “to announce in a few days what his numbers for Afghanistan will be”.

However a White House spokesman insisted that the decision on the plan drawn up by General Stanley McChrystal – the commander of international forces in Afghanistan – was still “weeks and not days” away.

Downing Street later sought to play down Mr Brown’s remarks, saying that he had been “using that phrase in the vernacular”.

Mr Obama was meeting members of his war council today to discuss the forward strategy in Afghanistan.

It is the eighth such session with the national security team in recent weeks.

The President has come under increasing pressure to announce a decision on troop numbers – it is now almost three months since he received General McChrystal’s report.

Speculation in the US over the last few days has suggested that key aides are coalescing around a figure of 30,000 or more additional soldiers being deployed.

The New York Times reported that US defence secretary Robert Gates, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff Mike Mullen and secretary of state Hillary Clinton are all signed up to the 30,000-plus proposal.

But the White House has repeatedly batted away reports that the president has already made up his mind.

Press secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters on Air Force One yesterday that anyone who suggests otherwise has not got “the slightest idea what they are talking about”.

He added that the president’s national security team were discussing four options, but would not reveal details of the different proposals on the table.

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