Politics | President Obama speech Speech, Afghan Reality Don't Quite Match Allies may not help; Afghan troops ineffective even if trained By Will McCahill Posted Dec 1, 2009 8:16 PM CST Copied President Barack Obama speaks about the war in Afghanistan at the US Military Academy at West Point, NY, tonight. (AP Photo) President Obama’s speech tonight “raised expectations that may be hard to meet,” AP analysts Calvin Woodward and Robert Burns write, citing conditions in Afghanistan that don’t match Obama’s rhetoric: US allies will add troops: In fact, this has always been a tough sell, and even if they commit—and many European countries see Afghanistan as more of humanitarian case—it could be a long time before reinforcements actually appear. Indeed, France and Germany said earlier today they wouldn't immediately send any troops. The additional troops will boost the training of Afghan forces: Even when trained, “too many get into the fight but don’t remain or don’t perform.” Still, Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s approach of pairing whole US units with newly commissioned Afghan forces could help; it has in Iraq. Read These Next The vinyl tracklist can be very different from what you know. Zelensky visits Trump Monday, and he won't be alone. Most likely outcomes in Ukraine emerge. Stalkers are increasingly heading into the sports arena. Report an error