‘Not Convinced Russia Offered Taliban Bounties to Kill US Troops’: Esper to Lawmakers

Foreign Affairs

Washington. Speaking publicly for the first time Pentagon’s top civilian and top uniformed official on July 9, about recent reports that Russia’s military intelligence agency had put bounties on US troops fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan, said that those intelligence reports are uncorroborated.

Defence Secretary Mark Esper said that he had never been specifically briefed on the proposition of Russia offering bounties to Taliban fighters.

“It is the opinion of a number of intelligence entities, agencies, that could not corroborate the report,” he told the House Armed Services Committee.

Both Esper and Army Gen. Mark Milley, the Joint Chiefs chairman, answered multiple questions about the report, first published in late June by The New York Times, which stated that US intelligence officials had briefed President Trump about the bounties in March, but that the administration had taken no action against Russia.

The White House has denied that the president was briefed on the programme, and has since launched an investigation into who might have leaked information about such a briefing to the press. Esper testified that he has initiated a similar DoD-wide investigation.

For his part, Milley said that while the Defence Department has been aware of Russian cooperation with the Taliban, his office has not been working on the assumption that the bounties are real.

“There’s a big distinction between arming and directing. We don’t have ― in the case of the Russians ― we do not have concrete, corroborating evidence, intelligence, to show directing,” he said. “And that’s a big difference. And if we did, it would be a different response. We’re not done looking. We’re going to get to the bottom of this bounty thing.”

The top US General for the West Asia said the intelligence suggesting that Russia may have paid Taliban militants to kill American troops in Afghanistan was worrisome, but he is not convinced that any bounties resulted in US military deaths.

Both Esper and Milley stressed that US Central Command is aware of threats to US troops operating in Afghanistan and is operating at the highest levels of force protection, but had not made any specific changes following a February intelligence report on potential bounties.