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Sydney (AFP) Jun 21, 2005 Australia left the door open for a troop deployment to Afghanistan Tuesday, with Defence Minister Robert Hill saying recent gains made in the country needed to be consolidated. Hill said the end of Australia's peacekeeping mission to East Timor and the success of law and order programmes in other areas of the Pacific had freed military resources to move to other regions. "The operational tempo has been high, and is still high, but we have been able to reduce our force size substantially in the Solomon Islands, we've now completed the peacekeeping mission in East Timor, so in some ways there's a little more flexibility now than there was a year or two ago," Hill told reporters. The minister said the government was still focused on Iraq, where some 900 Australian soldiers are deployed, but he did not rule out boosting Canberra's military involvement in Afghanistan. "I think what's been achieved in Afghanistan is tremendous, but it needs to be consolidated. Other countries have been making that contribution, the United Kingdom again, Canada, the US, Europeans, NATO as a group is contributing," he said. "Whether Australia makes another contribution is something that cabinet will have to decide in due course." Australia currently has just one soldier engaged in land mine clearance in Afghanistan. But Canberra deployed some 150 Special Air Service soldiers to the country after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States to assist a US-led invasion. The US-led coalition is fighting a mainly guerrilla war against remnants of the former Taliban regime and other insurgents. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links SpaceDaily Search SpaceDaily Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express The Long War - Doctrine and Application
![]() ![]() A Northrop Grumman-led team has been selected by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to continue development of the handheld isothermal silver standard sensor (HISSS), a portable system used for identifying biological-warfare agents, including bacteria, viruses and toxins. |
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