| Months after President Obama formally declared that the United States’  long war against the Taliban was over in Afghanistan, the American military is  regularly conducting airstrikes against low-level insurgent forces and sending  Special Operations troops directly into harm’s way under the guise of  “training and advising.” | 
  | In justifying the continued presence  of the American forces in Afghanistan, administration officials have insisted  that the troops’ role is relegated to counterterrorism, defined as  tracking down the remnants of Al Qaeda and other global terrorist groups, and  training and advising the Afghan security forces who have assumed the bulk of  the fight. | 
  | In public, officials have emphasized that the Taliban are not  being targeted unless it is for “force protection” — where the  insurgents were immediately threatening American forces. | 
  | But interviews  with American and Western officials in Kabul and Washington offer a picture of a  more aggressive range of military operations against the Taliban in recent  months, as the insurgents have continued to make gains against struggling  government forces. | 
  | Rather than ending the American war in Afghanistan, the  military is using its wide latitude to instead transform it into a continuing  campaign of airstrikes — mostly drone missions — and Special  Operations raids that have in practice regularly stretched or broken the ground  rules publicly described by the White House. | 
                             | READ MORE »http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/30/world/asia/more-aggressive-role-by-us-military-is-seen-in-afghanistan.html?emc=edit_na_20150429 |