PRESS ADDRESS - Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, addresses the media during a press briefing at the Pentagon, Sept. 23, 2010. DOD photo by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley
Defense Officials: National Security Team Unified On Afghan War Strategy -- Stars And Stripes
WASHINGTON – Pushing back against characterizations made in a new book that the White House was riven by infighting over Afghan war strategy last year, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen said Thursday that the U.S. strategy is sound and that President Obama’s national security team is unified in carrying it out.
“The relationship among senior officials in this administration is as harmonious as any I’ve experienced in my time in government,” Gates told Pentagon reporters. “Presidents are always well served when there is a vigorous and spirited debate over important issues.”
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More News On Afghanistan
Gates Defends Policy on Afghanistan and the Debate That Shaped It -- New York Times
Mixed messages from Obama, Petraeus on Afghanistan pullout -- Christian Science Monitor
Afghan, Coalition Forces Pursue Taliban Commanders -- US Department of Defense
In northern Afghanistan, suicide bomber kills civilian -- CNN
One child killed, 29 injured in suicide blast in N. Afghanistan -- Xinhuanet
NATO frees Al Jazeera cameraman -- AFP
ISAF frees two journalists detained this week -- CNN
Afghanistan election investigators face threats, bribes -- Christian Science Monitor
Army Reveals Afghan Biometric ID Plan; Millions Scanned, Carded by May -- The Danger Room
Afghanistan's first female army officers graduate -- Yahoo News/AFP
Afghanistan adds female officers to swelling army -- Yahoo News/Reuters
4 senators seek removal of special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction -- Washington Post
Contractor Deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan Outnumber Service Member Deaths -- New York Times
Contractor death toll surpasses military's in Iraq, Afghanistan -- Washington Technology
More Contractors Dying In Iraq And Afghanistan Than Soldiers -- NPR
US military deaths in Afghanistan at 1,200 -- Washington Post/AP
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