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US concerned international community may abandon Afghanistan

US wants France to send combat troops to Afghanistan
The United States said Thursday it would like France to send combat troops to southern Afghanistan without saying it would make an explicit request to French Defense Minister Herve Morin. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack did not say exactly what kind of help Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice expected from her meeting in Washington with Morin later Thursday. But he recalled that Canada had offered to keep its troops in volatile southern Afghanistan beyond 2009 if it received reinforcements, helicopters and drones. "There is still a need for about a thousand (troops) down there in the south and we are going to encourage everybody to take a look at what they might do," McCormack said. "I know that that request is out there from the Canadians and any requests for more combat troops down in the south are not limited to France. That is a request that goes to all our NATO allies," he said. Morin began his visit to Washington late Wednesday. He is building on the visit made here last November by France's new President Nicolas Sarkozy, who received a warm US welcome and eased tensions over French opposition to the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Sources close to Morin list several possibilities for Afghanistan: a redeployment of French troops who are currently in Kabul; the dispatch of more instructors for Afghan security forces; the return of French special forces to Afghanistan: or even a substantial increase in the total French deployment.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Jan 31, 2008
The United States expressed concern Thursday that the international community could abandon Afghanistan, cautioning that success in the insurgency-wracked nation was "not assured."

"The greatest threat to Afghanistan's future is abandonment by the international community," Richard Boucher, the State Department's pointman for Afghanistan, told a Senate hearing on the turmoil in Afghanistan.

He said the mission in Afghanistan needed more troops and equipment, such as helicopters, pointing out that "too few of our allies have combat troops fighting the insurgents especially in the south."

Southern Afghanistan has seen the worst violence since the Taliban were ousted in the US-led invasion in 2001, after the September 11 terror attacks masterminded by Al-Qaeda, whose leaders, including Osama bin laden, were given sanctuary by the Taliban.

Several top experts, including retired US Marine Corps general James Jones, warned in separate reports Wednesday that Afghanistan could become a failed state. British aid agency Oxfam warned of the risk of a humanitarian catastrophe there unless Western countries made a "major change of direction" in strategy.

The reports came amid new concerns over the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's commitment to providing more troops to fight a resurgent Taliban militia, whose control of the sparsely populated parts of Afghanistan was increasing.

"Success is possible but not assured," said Boucher, who came under intense questioning from Senators at the hearing. "Therefore, the international community needs to continue and expand its efforts."

"We expect more from our NATO allies; we have promised the Afghan people to assist in stabilizing their country, and we must give NATO personnel the tools they need to make good on that promise," he said.

There are about 40,000 NATO and 20,000 US-led coalition force soldiers in Afghanistan at present.

Washington will deploy an additional 3,200 marines this spring -- 2,200 will be deployed to the NATO's southern regional command while the remaining 1,000 marines will train with Afghan forces.

"This is welcome news -- but does anyone truly believe it be enough to turn the tide," asked Democratic Senator Joseph Biden, who heads the Senate foreign relations panel, which held the hearing Thursday.

"If we should be surging forces anywhere, it's in Afghanistan, not Iraq," he said referring to a stepped-up US military strength in Iraq last year which appeared to be bringing the war in Iraq under control.

At the hearing, women from Code Pink, a national anti-war grassroots organization, wore tee shirts with the words "Where's Osama" and held placards "Security thru peace."

"We went to Afghanistan to capture Bin Laden but what has happened now," 66-year-old Joan Stallard told AFP.

Republican Senator Richard Lugar expressed dismay at the "troubling shortfall" of political commitment among NATO members that was hampering the ongoing operations in Afghanistan.

"The time when NATO could limit its missions to the defense of continental Europe is far in the past. With the end of the Cold War, the gravest threats to Europe and North America originate from other regions in the world," he said.

Boucher said that while Afghanistan had made progress on a broad range of fronts, including economic growth, institutional building and on the battlefield, "our job is not finished and important challenges remain."

He also expressed Washington's concern over the increase in detention of journalists in Afghanistan, and interference by the Karzai administration in media coverage of the past year.

"Also troubling," he said, were the deaths of two female journalists last summer and the recent death sentence of a young Afghan journalist, he said.

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Afghanistan may plunge into 'failed state,' experts warn
Washington (AFP) Jan 30, 2008
Insurgency-wracked Afghanistan will become a failed state if urgent steps are not taken to tackle a deteriorating security situation and lackluster reconstruction and governance efforts, experts warned in separate reports Wednesday.







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