Enjoy Discounted Exercise Equipment From Leading Sales Outlets
SEARCH IT

CHANNELS
Encyclopedia Astronautica
SERVICES
 
Spacer Homebase
Eurocorps to take over ISAF command in August
STRASBOURG (AFP) May 13, 2004
Eurocorps will take over command of NATO-run international peacekeepers in the Afghan capital Kabul in August, the head of the five-nation military force said.

Eurocorps will take control of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), currently under Canadian command, for six months, General Jean-Louis Py said late on Wednesday.

"We will thus fulfill our vocation of being a rapid European reaction force, at the service of NATO, for this operation to secure and rebuild Afghanistan in support of the Afghan government," Py said in a speech at a reception in Strasbourg, eastern France, where Eurocorps is based.

Py said the force deployed in Afghanistan would come from Eurocorps' command structures -- from Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg and Spain -- and the general staff of the Franco-German brigade based in the Black Forest. A Belgian unit might also take part, he said.

NATO took command last year of the 6,100-strong ISAF, which was set up by the United Nations in December 2001, weeks after the defeat of the radical Islamic Taliban regime.

France and Germany confirmed on Thursday the Franco-German brigade would head the Eurocorps force in Afghanistan.

Eurocorps, which consists of 60,000 men and around 1,000 tanks and armoured vehicles, would initially operate solely in Kabul but discussions are continuing on extending its control to civilian-military reconstruction teams (PRTs) in the provinces, a Eurocorps official told AFP.

The PRTs, run either by the US military or NATO, are responsible for boosting reconstruction work, security and central government control over the central Asian country's unstable provinces, particularly in the run-up to presidential and parliamentary elections scheduled to take place in September.

More than 1,000 men from the 5,000-strong Franco-German brigade may be sent to Afghanistan and they would take over control of PRTs under NATO command if that decision is approved, the Eurocorps official said.

The Atlantic alliance agreed earlier this year to a request from the Afghan authorities to extend the peacekeeping force beyond Kabul to the provinces, but is battling to persuade its member states to provide the necessary resources.

NATO currently commands one 200-man PRT in Kunduz, northern Afghanistan, and said last week it expected to take command of five others in the north by the end of June.

Twelve PRTs are under the command of the separate 11,000-strong US military force in Afghanistan, mainly in the south, and British forces oversee another PRT in northern Mazar-i-Sharif.

Eurocorps, created in 1992, was approved as a NATO rapid reaction force in

The Afghan operation will be the force's first outside Europe. Between 1998 and 2000 its troops took part in the NATO-led Stabilisation Force (SFOR) in Bosnia-Hercegovina.

All rights reserved. Copyright 2003 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.

Quick Links
SpaceWar
Search SpaceWar
Subscribe To SpaceWar Express

SpaceWar Search Engine
SUBSCRIBE TO THE SPACEWAR NEWSLETTER
SubscribeUnsubscribe
  

WAR.WIRE
  • Indian army kills two gunmen in Kashmir
  • Second Fukushima debris removal trial complete
  • Uganda army chief in talks with DR Congo militia
  • Iran says technical nuclear meeting with US postponed to Saturday
  • Hamas team heads to Cairo for Gaza talks as Israel strikes kill 26
  • Spain to hike defence spending to 2% of GDP in 2025: PM
  • Putin discussed Iran nuclear deal with Sultan of Oman: Russian state media
  • Nordics, Lithuania plan joint purchase of combat vehicles
  • China says expects 'in-depth' talks during Iran FM visit
  • Gaza rescuers say 25 killed in Israeli air strikes
    SPACEDAILY NEWS
     Feb 11, 2005
  • NASA Observations Help Determine Titan Wind Speeds
  • Cassini Spacecraft Witnesses Saturn's Blues
  • US Orientation Engine Fails On ISS
  • NASA Names Two Future Space Shuttle Crews
  • Simulations Show How Growing Black Holes Regulate Galaxy Formation
  • In The Stars: Odd Stars, Odder Planets
  • Natural Climate Change May Be Larger Than Commonly Thought
  • Earth Gets A Warm Feeling All Over
  • Satamatics Flying At Over 50,000 Terminals
  • Digital Angel To Expand OuterLink Subsidiary's Flight Tracking System
  • LockMart Delivers First Modernized GPS Satellite To USAF For May Launch
  • World's Fastest Oscillating Nanomachine Holds Promise For Quantum Computing
  • Carnegie Mellon's Red Team Seeks $2 Million Robot Racing Prize
  • Kionix Ships The World's Smallest High-Performance Tri-Axis Accelerometer
  • Northrop Grumman/Raytheon Team To Compete For GOES-R System
  • Blue Planet: The Fading Songs Of Whales
  • New Cameras Turn Night Into Day
  • North Korea Suspends Talks, Says It Will Build More Nuclear Bombs
  • Analysis: How Super Is The Superpower?
  • Walker's World: Why Rice Should Thank Zarqawi
  • NATO Agrees Expansion Of Afghan Force
  • North Korea Probably Bluffing Over Nuclear Threat: Australia
  • US Options Seen Limited Against Nuclear-Armed North Korea
  • Six Iraqi Policemen Killed, US Helicopters Fire Missiles To End Siege
  • Germany And Malaysia Urge Peace In Tsunami-Ravaged Aceh
  • Task Of Collecting Indonesia's Tsunami Dead Will Take Six Months: Red Cross
  • EU Brings Forward Preferential Trade Scheme For Developing Countries
  • Cambodia's Former Forestry Monitor Blasts World Bank Over Logging
  • Thales Posts Lower Sales In 2004, Missing Own Target
  • Rolls-Royce Profits Rise; Orders At Record Levels

  • The contents herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2002 - SpaceDaily. AFP Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement