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THE STANS
NATO says to clear Taliban from Kandahar areas by year end

US expects allies to meet Afghan troop request: Pentagon
Washington (AFP) Sept 7, 2010 - The United States expects its allies to meet a request from the NATO commander in Afghanistan for more troops to train the country's security forces, a Pentagon spokesman said on Tuesday. The commander of US-led troops in Afghanistan, General David Petraeus, has called on the alliance to provide 2,000 troops, including units that could help instruct Afghan security forces. Pentagon spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan said the request was a longstanding requirement that did not change the size of the international force, and that the US military had no plans to meet it. "This is not a new requirement," said Lapan, adding that the alliance had merely "revalidated" the need for the troops. "It doesn't involve additional US forces at this point."

NATO countries previously failed to provide enough trainers to Afghanistan and as a result, Defense Secretary Robert Gates in May approved the temporary deployment of about 800 trainers as a stop-gap measure. The US trainers, mostly from the 82nd Airborne Division, were due to complete their tour this month. The United States has about 95,000 soldiers on the ground, part of a coalition force of nearly 150,000 troops. NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, however, said it was unclear where the 2,000 troops would come from. "The composition of the 2,000 will very much depend on the force generation process. So here and now I don't know how many will be US, how many will be other allies and partners," Rasmussen told reporters during a visit to Washington. The NATO chief, who was due to meet President Barack Obama, said building up the Afghan security forces was crucial to paving the way for a gradual handover of responsibility from foreign troops. "One might say trainers are the ticket to transition," he said.
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Sept 7, 2010
Coalition troops hope to root out the Taliban insurgency from districts around the key southern Afghan city of Kandahar by the end of November, the NATO commander in southern Afghanistan said Tuesday.

Between 15,000 and 17,000 Afghan forces and 15,000 international troops will be involved in a mission to crush an estimated 500 to 800 insurgents in Arghandab, Zhari and Panjwaii, said British Major General Nick Carter.

"There is still an insurgency (outside Kandahar) that is resilient and needs to be dealt with," Carter told NATO reporters in Brussels in a video news conference from Kandahar.

"Our expectation is that by mid to the end of November that we would have rid this area pretty much of the Taliban," he said.

Afghan security forces will lead the operation with support from NATO troops, Carter said.

The NATO-led mission in Afghanistan has swelled to 150,000 soldiers as part of a surge strategy aimed at defeating the Taliban once and for all, nearly nine years after the war was launched in the wake of the September 11 attacks.

More than 500 foreign soldiers have died in the Afghan war so far this year, compared to 521 deaths all of last year, as fighting intensifies with the arrival of more troops.

Kandahar is the birthplace of the Taliban movement and a hotbed of bombings, assassinations and lawlessness.

A vital objective of the mission around Kandahar is to secure a highway vital to the economy of the city, which has a population of around one million people when counting its surrounding areas, Carter said.

Taliban insurgents are operating "with a degree of freedom" against Highway 1, an east-west highway, the general said.

The economy around the city, driven by the growth of fruits such as grapes, pomegranates and apricots, is "moribund," he said.

"At the moment it is very difficult for the average Afghan to get any of these produce to a market because lack of freedom of movement on the key highway," Carter said.

The general said he also wants to double the amount of electricity for the city over the next six to nine months, noting that the lack of power contributed to the closure of 800 businesses in the last two years.

Another key to the mission is to improve governance in the lawless region, he said.

"You can't get genuine stability unless you get security and governance working in parallel," Carter said.

earlier related report
Overstretched West needs new Afghan strategy: IISS
London (AFP) Sept 7, 2010 - Western powers must change strategy to focus on the "containment" of Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants in Afghanistan instead of on failed efforts at nation-building, a leading think-tank said Tuesday.

The attempt to restore order to Afghanistan was "hitting its political and military limits" as the war nears the start of its tenth year, the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) said.

The need for a new policy is part of a wider picture left by the aftermath of the global financial crisis and by shifts in the balance of power, it said in its "Strategic Survey 2010" annual review of global security.

"It may become necessary and is probably advisable for outside powers to move to a containment and deterrence policy to deal with the international terrorist threat from the Afghan-Pakistan border regions," the report said.

"The future clearly lay in negotiations with or among the participants in the conflict," it said, adding that "many worry that the large presence of foreign troops is what sustains and fuels the Taliban fighters."

President Barack Obama has recently appeared to step back from a pledge that US forces would begin withdrawing from Afghanistan in July 2011. He has already deployed 30,000 extra troops as part of a new counter-insurgency strategy.

But the IISS said it had become "increasingly questionable" whether objectives such as beating back the Taliban, building an Afghan government and security forces and eliminating corruption could be achieved.

The mounting death toll of foreign troops -- nearly 500 in 2010 alone -- was feeding doubts in most of the countries contributing to the 150,000-strong international force in Afghanistan, it added.

Drawing down troops too quickly could cause an "implosion of Afghanistan", the report said, but to persist with the current mission "risks being carried forward by outdated thinking into a long drawn-out disaster."

It said the West had to work out a strategy for Pakistan, which was taking a long-term view to when there was no foreign presence in the region and had "stoutly resisted" pressure to act against militants on its soil who are responsible for violence in Afghanistan.

A new world order was emerging meanwhile from the debris of the 2008 global financial crisis, with the United States at risk of "strategic fatigue" and other powers jostling for influence, the IISS report said.

It pointed to a group of "newly energised middle powers" including Turkey, Brazil, South Korea and the United Arab Emirates that were trying to extend their clout in their regions.

"With economies and nerves frayed, and the nationalisation of foreign policy all the rage, the appetite for very ambitious collective long-term political-military goals is limited in the West," the report said.

Turkey and Brazil made efforts to become involved in Iran's stand-off with Western nations over its nuclear goals, while South Korea and the United Arab Emirates were involved with North Korea and Iran respectively, it said.

Australia, Indonesia and South Korea were increasingly interested in multilateral consultation and "may in time become a diplomatic force to be reckoned with" against the "relentless" expansion of Chinese power.

China and India both continued to grow in self-confidence, though their rise as world powers was slowed by their "diffidence" in shaping the international agenda as they defended their own core interests, the report said.

The Asian giants were more interested in each other and were "sometimes brought into uncomfortable strategic contact along their own border", particularly in Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Myanmar, it said.

China's confidence was bolstered by riding out the financial crisis more quickly than other countries, though Beijing faced growing expectations to play a role in addressing world challenges.

"How to balance these global expectations with its own national priorities was likely to be an increasingly tricky problem for Beijing in the years to come," the report said.



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THE STANS
Handover to Afghans will start in 2011: NATO chief
Washington (AFP) Sept 7, 2010
NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen on Tuesday said he hoped US-led troops would begin handing over responsibility to Afghan security forces sometime next year. The secretary-general said he expected that the alliance would unveil plans at a November summit in Lisbon for a gradual transition to Afghan forces in 2011, which would fit in with President Barack Obama's plans to start a US withdrawa ... read more







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