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Surge will 'reverse' Taliban momentum: US commander

Karzai urges aid to fund Afghan security for 15-20 years
Kabul, Afghanistan (AFP) Dec 8, 2009 - President Hamid Karzai said Tuesday that Afghanistan lacked the resources to fund its security forces for the next 15 to 20 years, appealing for foreign aid to stand up the police and army. "For 15 to 20 years, Afghanistan will not be able to sustain a force of that nature and capability with its own resources," Karzai told a joint news conference with visiting US Defence Secretary Robert Gates. He spoke following talks with Gates on how Washington intends to implement a sweeping new war strategy that will send 30,000 extra American troops to fight the Taliban, in a bid to start withdrawing US forces from July 2011. The projected US drawdown of forces has sparked concern in Afghanistan and neighbouring Pakistan at a time when the Taliban-led insurgency is at its deadliest since the 2001 US-led invasion ousted their regime in Kabul.

"We hope that the international community and the United States, as our first ally, will help Afghanistan reach the ability to sustain a force," the Afghan president told the news conference. "Afghanistan is looking forward to taking over responsibility in terms of paying for its forces and delivering to its forces with its own resources, but that will not be for another 15 years. "That doesn't mean we will not be taking responsibilities financially for 15 years. We will keep on adding to it as we are already doing now," he added. Karzai, who was sworn in three weeks ago for another five years in power following a deeply controversial August election steeped in fraud, reiterated his goal to take over security in the war-torn country during his mandate. "We are working hard as we have now taken responsibilities in Kabul to provide security, in such critical areas of the country in another two years and hopefully with a maximum effort to add on the whole of the country... in five years time," the Afghan president said.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 8, 2009
The NATO commander in Afghanistan on Tuesday predicted a surge of US troops will reverse the momentum of Taliban insurgents within a year and ensure their ultimate defeat.

The additional 30,000 troops ordered by President Barack Obama will reverse insurgent momentum "by this time next year" and cut off the Taliban from the population, General Stanley McChrystal, head of US and allied forces in Afghanistan, told US lawmakers.

The general, testifying before the House Armed Services Committee, said that "by the summer of 2011, it will be clear to the Afghan people that the insurgency will not win, giving them the chance to side with their government."

McChrystal, who stands at the center of a renewed push in the Afghan war, said he was confident of success because the Taliban remained unpopular and that Afghans did not see foreign troops as occupiers but as a "necessary bridge to future security and stability."

The Taliban "are not a national liberation front that people inside are just waiting for their success," the general said. "They succeed largely on their coercion."

McChrystal presented a united front at the hearing with US ambassador to Kabul, Karl Eikenberry, despite public clashes between the two over war strategy that had played out in leaked newspaper reports.

Obama's plan combines a troop buildup with a target date of July 2011 for the start of a gradual US withdrawal, a provision that has drawn criticism from Republicans who say it plays into the hands of the enemy.

A new survey released Tuesday showed American public support for the war rose sharply since Obama presented his plan last week. Backing for the mission jumped nine points to 57-35 percent in favor, according to the Quinnipiac University poll.

McChrystal told lawmakers he did not propose the target date for the start of a withdrawal but said setting a timeline for a handover to Afghans posed no problem from a "military standpoint."

He added that the insurgents could try to misrepresent the date for propaganda purposes.

Obama's promise to begin withdrawing troops in mid-2011 has sparked concern in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan that the Taliban could sit out the surge and attack a pared down force in 18 months' time.

Despite his optimistic forecast, McChrystal warned that coalition forces faced "a complex and resilient insurgency" and that the most difficult task would be improving the credibility of local and national government.

Pressed by lawmakers, the general said he was satisfied with the reinforcements approved by Obama as well as 7,000 troops promised by NATO allies and said he did not expect to ask for more forces within a year.

The testimony comes a week after Obama announced the deployment of additional forces, a risky decision with many of the president's fellow Democrats increasingly anxious about the costly eight-year-old war.

A contingent of 1,500 Marines from Camp Lejeune in North Carolina will begin arriving next week in the southern Helmand province as a first step in the troop buildup.

Appearing together before lawmakers, both McChrystal and Eikenberry sought to play down their differences over the war.

Eikenberry, a retired general and former commander in Afghanistan, acknowledged he had questioned the size of a planned troop surge but said he supported the final decision.

"It was not a question of additional troops. It was the question as we all had about the number of troops," he said.

During the policy debate, Eikenberry said he had concerns about the timeline for the troop deployments and "what would be the context that those troops would operate in."

He said he was now "unequivocally" in support of the mission.

Top military officer Admiral Mike Mullen meanwhile said the argument was in the past and that the president's team was unified.

"I think the published part of what has occurred is over. And there was -- and I was very much in this -- a very intense, heated debate about how to proceed forward," Mullen told reporters.

During the White House debate, Eikenberry reportedly wrote cables saying corruption in the Afghan government had to be addressed first before a big troop surge.

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Gates in Afghanistan for talks on US troop surge
Kabul (AFP) Dec 8, 2009
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates held talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Tuesday to thrash out Washington's sweeping new strategy to send 30,000 extra troops to fight the Taliban. Gates is in Kabul on the first official US visit since President Barack Obama last week announced he would boost the US deployment in Afghanistan to 100,000 to counter an increasingly virulent Taliban ... read more







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