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THE STANS
Obama: U.S. on right track in Afghanistan

Afghans seek US commitment on future ties: official
Washington (AFP) May 12, 2010 - Afghan President Hamid Karzai wants to negotiate a security agreement with the United States that would ensure a US commitment to Kabul beyond July 2011, when American forces are due to start a withdrawal, a US military official said on Wednesday. Discussions during Karzai's visit to Washington this week have largely focused on the future of the US role in Afghanistan and what kind of legal "framework" should be drafted to define the relationship, the official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told reporters. Such an agreement would cover the US-Afghan relationship over the next three to five years, he said.

One model was the security agreement signed with Iraq, and the Afghans were citing US accords with major allies such as Japan or Australia, the official said. The US government officially designates Japan, Australia, Israel, South Korea and some other countries outside Europe as "major non-NATO" allies, allowing access to US military hardware and defense research projects. Neighboring Pakistan is also a "major non-NATO ally" (MNNA), a fact not lost on Afghan leaders who are anxious for Kabul to be put on an equal footing with their rival. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday said that talks with Afghan leaders had outlined what she called a "shared" future and promised that the United States would not "abandon the Afghan people."

Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell on Tuesday declined to confirm or deny that talks with Afghan defense and security officials had addressed a possible security agreement. But he said that Defense Secretary Robert Gates had told his Afghan counterpart that the US relationship with Kabul must be "an enduring one" and that both sides had agreed to a permanent "high-level defense dialogue." US officials had also sought to reassure the Afghans about the July 2011 deadline for the start of a phased US military withdrawal. "We all need to do a better job of explaining it (the deadline)," Morrell said.

Jordan trained 2,500 Afghan special forces: minister
Amman (AFP) May 12, 2010 - Jordan said on Wednesday it has trained 2,500 members of Afghanistan's special forces but added that it was still studying a request from NATO to train members of the Afghan police. "Jordan has trained 2,500 members of the Afghan special forces. This was in the past. The group has completed its training and there are no trainees now," Information Minister Nabil Sharif told a news conference. A Jordanian military source told AFP the training took place three years ago but declined to give details.

Asked about training for the Afghan police, Sharif said: "The kingdom hasn't yet decided on NATO's request." Jordan announced it had been asked to conduct the training after a visit to Amman in March by NATO secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen. Jordan's special forces chief Brigadier Ali Jaradat has said in published remarks that 1,500 servicemen, including anti-terror forces, from Afghanistan and Iraq have received training at the 200-million-dollar King Abdullah II Special Operations Training Centre, which was inaugurated in May last year.

"Troops from most of the Arab countries and other states have received training at the centre," he was quoted as saying. "The Americans and Europeans took part ... Most of the troops serving in Afghanistan received training at the centre before they went there." Jordan acknowledged it had a counterterrorism role in Afghanistan after the death in a January suicide bombing of a senior intelligence officer, who was also a member of the royal family. His death along with seven US Central Intelligence Agency personnel spotlighted for the first time Jordan's role in the international coalition in the war-hit country.
by Jessica Binschm, Medill News Service
Washington (UPI) May 12, 2010
While acknowledging that the fight ahead will be difficult, U.S. President Barack Obama said Wednesday he expects to meet his timeline and begin drawing down U.S. troops in Afghanistan by summer 2011.

At a news conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai in the East Room of the White House, Obama said the situation would get worse before it gets better.

"What I've tried to emphasize," Obama said, "is the fact that there is going to be some hard fighting over the next several months."

The international forces in Afghanistan are getting ready to retake Kandahar, the country's second largest city, in what is expected to be a tough battle.

Obama said U.S. forces are beginning to reverse the momentum of the insurgency, adding, "We are steadily making progress."

The American president emphasized the administration's approach near the end of the news conference, saying, "I am more convinced than ever that we have found a difficult but appropriate strategy."

This strategy will include Afghanistan's neighbor Pakistan, where Taliban fighters were able to take refuge in the past. Obama said Pakistani leaders are recognizing that extremist strongholds along their border are threatening Pakistan's sovereignty and security. The country is engaged in a military campaign against extremists in their border regions.

To stabilize and secure Afghanistan, Obama stressed that a civilian component is increasingly important, especially when troops begin to leave.

"We can't win with a military strategy alone," Obama said, adding that a long-term strategy has to include a civilian component.

"More American civilians and experts are now partnering with their Afghan colleagues," he said.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry have said that the number of U.S. civilians has tripled in the last year. However, the military presence still far outweighs the civilian, with an additional 30,000 troops alone set to be in Afghanistan by this summer as part of Obama's surge.

The administration has said it aims to begin the drawback by July 2011. Obama said he is confident this timeline will be met but that the United States will continue to invest resources in Afghanistan.

"Even as we begin to transition security responsibility to Afghans over the next year, we will sustain a robust commitment in Afghanistan going forward," Obama said.

On the issue of reconciliation with Taliban foot soldiers, Obama said the process has to be led by the Afghans. He expects a peace conference of Afghan leaders this summer to clarify the specifics of that process.

A draft of a plan for reintegration of low-level Taliban fighters calls for investments of $160 million funded by the United States, the United Kingdom and Japan, among others. The United States has stressed preconditions for Afghan insurgents rejoin mainstream society. Among those are that fighters put down their weapons and denounce violence, as well as accept the Afghan constitution and government.

Despite assurances that the Afghan government will lead the process, experts say the United States will be heavily involved.

"The U.S. has to be fully on board because it is the U.S. blood and treasure that is being invested in Afghanistan," said Lisa Curtis, a senior research fellow with The Heritage Foundation, a conservative Washington think tank. "The U.S. and the Karzai administration have to work hand in glove."

According to the draft, the reconciliation program would at first focus on a number of provinces across Afghanistan such as Helmand and Kandahar in the south or Kunduz in the north. Fighters willing to lay down their arms may be channeled through a demobilization center before they return to their villages, which would receive aid and investments in infrastructure.

At the news conference, both leaders sought to demonstrate unity and partnership. Tensions between the two countries that made headlines in recent months have been "simply overstated," Obama said. "Obviously there are going to be tensions in such a complicated and difficult environment and in a situation in which on the ground both Afghans and Americans are making enormous sacrifices."

Karzai said the two presidents discussed efforts to reduce civilian casualties "in great detail in a very frank and productive manner." The Afghan government in the past has asked U.S. forces to step up efforts to ensure the protection of civilians.

"When there is a civilian casualty, that is not just a political problem for me," Obama said. "I am ultimately accountable, just as (U.S. Army) General (Stanley) McChrystal is accountable, for somebody who is not on the battlefield getting killed."

Karzai visited the Walter Reed Army Medical Center Tuesday and said it was heart-rending for him to see wounded soldiers. He thanked the American people for their commitment. "The work that we have done promises a better future for Afghanistan," he said.



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THE STANS
U.S. looks to long-term Afghan commitment
Washington (UPI) May 11, 2010
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton outlined an American presence in Afghanistan that will continue even after U.S. troops have left the country, a significant change of perspective for the administration. "This partnership is a long-term commitment," Clinton said Tuesday, opening a day of consultations with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and many members of his Cabinet. "This commit ... read more







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