Barack Obama orders 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan.
Soldiers will be deployed as quickly as possible, bringing US troop strength in the country to more than 100,000.
Mr Obama reached his deployment decision after more than three months of deliberations and 10 top-level meetings with advisers. Gen Stanley McChrystal, the US commander in Afghanistan, welcomed the speech, saying he had been given "a clear military mission" and the necessary resources.
Some 32,000 other foreign troops are serving in Afghanistan but Nato allies have been cautious about contributing further forces.
But Nato's Secretary General, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, said he was confident 5,000 extra troops could be found.
In Afghanistan, the government also welcomed the decision. But there is concern that putting a date on a US withdrawal sends the wrong signal, says the BBC's Ian Pannell in Kabul.
It risks giving encouragement to the Taliban, our correspondent says, and most Afghans do not want more troops but direct talking to the insurgents to end the conflict.
In his speech, Mr Obama:
- celebrated the US as a nation "founded in resistance to oppression" and talked about its long record of sacrifice in "advancing frontiers of human liberty"
- promised an "effective partnership" with Pakistan, and warned that the US could not "tolerate a safe haven for terrorists "
- repeatedly cited the poor economy and stated that the estimated cost - $30bn for the US military this year - was a factor in his deliberations
Mr Obama delivered his nationally televised speech to cadets at the West Point military academy in New York.
US forces, he said, lacked "the full support they need to effectively train and partner with Afghan security forces and better secure the population".
Mr Obama said he was aware of the gravity of his decision to send the extra troops but he urged Americans not to see the conflict as a new Vietnam war. America was backed by a "broad coalition of 43 nations", he said, and was not facing a "broad-based popular insurgency".
"Most importantly, unlike Vietnam, the American people were viciously attacked from Afghanistan, and remain a target for those same extremists who are plotting along its border," the US leader added.
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