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US President and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama disembark from the Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on December 11, 2009 upon their return from Oslo, Norway. Obama returned home as a Nobel peace laureate from Oslo where he accepted the prestigious prize with a well-received speech on war and peace. AFP PHOTO/Jewel SAMAD
US President and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama disembark from the Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on December 11, 2009 upon their return from Oslo, Norway. Obama returned home as a Nobel peace laureate from Oslo where he accepted the prestigious prize with a well-received speech on war and peace. AFP PHOTO/Jewel SAMAD
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WASHINGTON — In strikingly personal comments about his order to escalate the war in Afghanistan, President Barack Obama said Sunday his decision to send an additional 30,000 combat troops was the hardest of his presidency.

Obama called his Dec. 1 speech at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in New York announcing the deployment the “most emotional speech I’ve made.”

“I was looking out over a group of cadets, some of whom were going to be deployed in Afghanistan,” Obama said in an interview on the CBS program “60 Minutes,” broadcast Sunday night. “And potentially some might not come back. There is not a speech that I’ve made that hit me in the gut as much as that speech.”

The president disagreed with criticism that his plan is confusing and contradictory because at the same time he announced the deployment, he set a date to start withdrawing troops in July 2011.

“Forty million people watched” the speech, Obama said, according to a transcript provided by CBS. “And I think a whole bunch of people understood what we intend to do. … There shouldn’t be anything confusing about that. … That’s something we executed over the last two years in Iraq. So I think the American people are familiar with the idea of the surge.”

In the interview, Obama also discussed jobs, the economy and health care. His responses to interviewer Steve Kroft were alternately grave, wry and witty.

He spoke frankly about the magnitude of the struggle to craft a strategy in South Asia. Asked about the detached tone of his West Point speech, Obama said the history of the Bush administration had shown him the perils of promising victory.

“One of the mistakes that was made over the last eight years is for us to have a triumphant sense about war,” Obama said. “There was a tendency to say, ‘We can go in. We can kick some tail. This is some glorious exercise.’ When in fact, this is a tough business.”

While planning the Afghan build- up, the administration wrestled with a thorny challenge: Although the goal is to defeat al-Qaeda, most of the terrorist network’s leaders, fighters and allies are in Pakistan. The “epicenter of violent extremism” menacing the West is based in the lawless border region and must be fought on both sides, Obama said.

“This is the heart of it,” Obama said. “This is where (Osama) bin Laden is. … Half of this territory is in Afghanistan; half of it is in Pakistan. Ultimately, in order for us to eradicate the problem, to really go after al-Qaeda in an effective way, we are going to need more cooperation from Pakistan. There is no doubt about that.”

Acknowledging that many Americans are fed up with the Afghan war, Obama defended the withdrawal date as a stern message to an Afghan government beset by corruption and disarray.

“Very frankly, there are, I think, elements in Afghanistan who would be perfectly satisfied to make Afghanistan a permanent protectorate of the United States,” Obama said.

He added: “That’s not what the American people signed off for when they went into Afghanistan in 2001. They signed up to go after al-Qaeda.”

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