2 US service members killed in Afghanistan as Pompeo vows troop reduction by 2020

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Two U.S. service members were killed in an apparent insider attack in Afghanistan on Monday, according to the Pentagon.

With their deaths, 14 American troops have now been killed in the country in 2019, even as the U.S. engages the Taliban in peace talks to wind down the U.S. war.

The attack comes on the same day that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said President Donald Trump has ordered a reduction in U.S. troops before the 2020 election.

The U.S. military has not released any other details on the attack, saying it is awaiting next of kin notification.

An Afghan security source told ABC News that an Afghan army soldier opened fire inside Tanajoh military camp in the Shahwali Koot district of Kandahar province in the south. The attacker was killed in return fire, the source said.

In a statement, the Taliban said an “unidentified Afghan soldier fired his gun … killing two U.S. soldiers and wounding three.”

The violence followed a deadly day on Sunday, when a suicide bomber attacked the offices of President Ashraf Ghani’s running mate and former chief of intelligence. At least 20 people were killed and about 50 were wounded.

The U.S. is about to start its eighth round of negotiations with the militant group in Qatar shortly, as the Trump administration moves to draw down the American military presence in Afghanistan nearly 18 years after the U.S. first invaded.

Pompeo said Trump had directed him to reduce U.S. troops before the 2020 presidential election.

“He’s been unambiguous: end the endless wars. Draw down. Reduce,” Pompeo said Monday in Washington, adding with a smile, “It’s not only my expectation. It would be job enhancing.”

Chief U.S. negotiator Zalmay Khalilzad said earlier this month those talks had made substantial progress, in particular on a timetable for U.S. withdrawal and getting a Taliban commitment to preventing Afghanistan from becoming a terror safe haven.

But critics, including some senior Afghan government officials, say the peace process has been dangerously flawed by keeping the Afghan government out of the talks so far. Other critics have questioned how the Taliban can commit to rooting out terrorism or why the U.S. would trust the group’s commitment, with details of any agreement so far still tightly held.

Khalilzad said on Sunday that talks between Taliban and Afghan government representatives would take place once the U.S. and Taliban reached an agreement. But the Taliban, which refuses to meet with the government because it calls it a U.S. puppet, will be meeting not one-on-one with government leaders, but a “national negotiating team,” Khalilzad said.

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