![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
. | ![]() |
. |
![]()
Brussels (AFP) July 1, 2010 US General David Petraeus visited NATO headquarters in Brussels on Thursday to confer with allies before heading to war in Afghanistan to take command of the faltering campaign. Petraeus began talks with NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen and was to address ambassadors of the 28-nation North Atlantic Council, the alliance's political body, a NATO official said on condition of anonymity. His visit came just one day after the US Senate unanimously confirmed him as the new war commander with lawmakers hoping Petraeus, credited in Washington with turning the Iraq war around, could do the same in Afghanistan. US President Barack Obama picked Petraeus to take charge of the 140,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan after he fired General Stanley McChrystal for insubordination. McChrystal left in disgrace after he and his aides showed disdain for administration civilian officials in a Rolling Stone magazine profile. "The Senate's quick action and General Petraeus's unrivaled experience will ensure we do not miss a beat in our strategy to break the Taliban's momentum and build Afghan capacity," Obama said after the general's confirmation. Petraeus, who was due to arrive in Kabul within days, takes over amid a tough fight against a resurgent Taliban that left more than 100 foreign troops dead in June, the deadliest month since the war began in the wake of the attacks of September 11, 2001 in the United States. In a new brazen attack, Taliban insurgents set off a car bomb and fired rockets at a major NATO base in eastern Afghanistan on Wednesday. NATO says the dramatic upswing in casualty numbers in June has been caused by its stepping up military operations and taking the fight to the Taliban in areas where the Islamist militia has previously been unchallenged. Europeans have grown weary of the war and their governments are beginning to plan how and when to withdraw their troops. The Dutch have announced that they would begin withdrawing troops in August and Canada's 2,800 soldiers are scheduled to return home next year. Petraeus, architect of the US military's "counterinsurgency" strategy, warned anxious US lawmakers this week that NATO-led forces face "tough fighting" ahead against the insurgency. "Indeed, it may get more intense in the next few months," said Petraeus. Petraeus warned it would take "a number of years" before Afghan security forces could take over for NATO-led troops, a step officials have described as a precondition for a complete withdrawal. His confirmation vote came with the US public deeply split on the war. Some polls show most Americans believe the war is not worth fighting, and lawmakers are bitterly divided over Obama's July 2011 deadline to begin a US withdrawal. Amid strains between military and civilian officials, Petraeus promised senators he would strive to forge "unity of effort" with US Ambassador Karl Eikenberry and White House officials, and pledged to review disputed rules restricting troops' use of firepower. Despite the fallout from the magazine article, the Pentagon on Wednesday promised it had no plans to shun reporters and wanted to provide more regular briefings on the Afghan war. The episode has set off an impassioned online debate about military-media relations and prompted predictions of a chilling effect for news coverage of the war and the Pentagon.
earlier related report Questions about President Hamid Karzai's suitability as a partner in the US-led effort to quell the Taliban insurgency have crescendoed since Petraeus was nominated to replace his sacked predecessor Stanley McChrystal. Karzai's distrust of the United States and unilateral overtures to the Taliban and Pakistan, as well as inaction on corruption, have become the backbeat of an unpopular war almost nine years old. "We all know Karzai is conducting a personal agenda, mostly in his dealings with Pakistan and the Taliban," political analyst Haroun Mir said of Karzai's attempts to broker a peace deal. "If the US remains passive it could damage the US, and Washington will remain outside this contact. It will hurt the US strategy." McChrystal was fired for insubordination after disparaging comments about US officials, including US President Barack Obama, appeared in a Rolling Stone magazine article. Petraeus this week addressed US lawmakers ahead of his approval as commander of the 140,000 US and NATO troops fighting the Taliban insurgency. His appointment was confirmed by the US Senate on Wednesday. He faced questions about how the war can be won, when US troops should come home and if Karzai is a fit partner. Outrage at the levels of corruption that saw Karzai re-elected as president last August subsided after his pledges to clean up graft and build up the nation's security capacity. But the debacle over McChrystal's departure coincided with a dramatic uptick in foreign troop casualties -- more than 1,000 American and 300 British dead since 2001, and more than 100 NATO soldiers in June alone. Fears the war is bogged down have been exacerbated by McChrystal's failure to secure the poppy-growing centre of Marjah, in Helmand province, and the postponement of escalated operations in the Taliban heartland of Kandahar. Karzai has caused concern among NATO allies by blaming Afghan opium production on the West, corruption on countries pouring in aid money, and sacking competent ministers favoured by the West. Most worrying for Washington, however, is his apparent willingness to include Pakistan's spy agency, and possibly militant groups associated with Al-Qaeda, in a power-sharing peace agreement. Reports in recent days indicated that Karzai could be using the uproar surrounding McChrystal's departure to pursue the Pakistan option, a Western ambassador said, on condition he not be identified. "It is still too early to talk within the parameters of a settlement. This is also Karzai's feeling and he is using the changes as a cover to move the momentum forward," he said. Karzai's office on Monday dismissed a report by Al-Jazeera television that he had met face-to-face with Sirajuddin Haqqani, who heads the brutal Al-Qaeda-linked Haqqani network, as a prelude to peace talks. US media reported that Pakistani military and intelligence officials have been shuttling between Kabul and Islamabad to push their agenda with Karzai, and ensure that Washington is locked out of any deal. Observers said this was an area where Petraeus -- also a consummate politician -- could make a difference. "If we look at the political prospects, the change will be positive because McChrystal was too close to Karzai and couldn't criticise him, even when it was necessary," said Mir. "Petraeus will be much more aggressive in trying to convince Karzai that going it alone will not work," he said. A Western diplomat agreed, noting that Karzai welcomed McChrystal's efforts to repair broken bridges in relations with Obama and his ambassador to Kabul, Karl Eikenberry, which reached a nadir last year after the ambassador's criticisms of the president became public. Working as "both commander and ambassador," McChrystal had brokered a thaw between Karzai and Eikenberry in recent months, a Western diplomat said. "McChrystal has a political legacy as primary channel of communications with Karzai, building up the communities and empowering Afghans. "There is certainly interest in Karzai establishing some close and cordial relationship with Petraeus, as he had with McChrystal, especially as he responded so well to Karzai's main concern, civilian casualties. "That will be the measurement by which Afghans will value Petraeus," he said.
Share This Article With Planet Earth
Related Links News From Across The Stans
![]() ![]() Washington (AFP) July 1, 2010 One year since China's worst ethnic violence in decades, the exiled leader of the Uighur minority has seen a surge of global interest in her cause but says the world can do far more. Long an obscure issue to much of the world, the simmering resentment against Beijing's rule by the mostly Muslim Uighur community burst into the open in July last year as riots engulfed Urumqi, capital of the va ... read more |
![]() |
|
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. 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 |