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Spain: Socialist Party government to send troops to Afghanistan
and Haiti
By Vicky Short
24 July 2004
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The Socialist Workers Party of Spain (PSOE) government has
committed more troops to Afghanistan, as well as a contingent
of civil guards and police experts to Haiti. The measure was approved
in the Spanish Congress on July 6.
At present Spain has 137 soldiers in Afghanistan as part of
the International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF). This figure
is going to be increased to 540 in August. In addition, the government
will deploy a further 400 to 500-strong battalion for a provisional
period of three months, to help with the election process due
to start in September. Defence Minister Jose Bono said that Madrid
planned to send an infantry battalion, a field hospital, four
helicopters and two Hercules C-130 transport airplanes to Afghanistan.
Spain backed Frances opposition to the use of the recently
created NATO Response Force (NRF) in Afghanistan, as had been
requested by Britain and the United States. The NRF was set up
last year with a heavy French contingent, but is not due to become
fully operational until October 2006. The refusal by the French
to use this force in Afghanistan has exacerbated tensions between
Europe and the US. French President Jacques Chirac said that the
NRF should only be used when there is a serious security crisis,
not for Afghan-style missions. The NRF is not designed for
this. It shouldnt be used just for any old matter,
he added.
In addition, Spain will send 28 experts from the Civil Guard
and National Police Corps to Haiti in October that will be under
the command of the United Nations. According to government officials,
they will be utilised for the training of a new Haitian police
force. Initially the numbers were going to be around 110, but
the director of the Spanish Civil Guard, Carlos Gomez Arruche,
said that the demand was for very experienced officials who could
speak French. Further forces are planned to be sent in 2005 for
coastguard activities.
This is the first time in its history that the Spanish Congress
has taken such a decision to send troops to a foreign country.
Only a couple of small nationalist parties and the Left-Greens
tendency voted in opposition. Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero
justified the despatch of additional troops to Afghanistan and
Haiti because these were multilateral initiatives backed
by the international community, i.e., the United Nations.
He added in his statement to Congress that up until now Spanish
military presence abroad had depended on the decisions of the
successive governments, but that the present executive wanted
to establish different procedures and consult the
Congress. To this effect, the head of the government has announced
a reform of the Law of Defence, so that any future deployment
of troops will have to be submitted to a discussion in parliament.
Before his election as prime minister in the general election
of March 14, Zapatero had chastised the right-wing Popular Party
(PP) government for sending troops to Iraq without allowing any
discussion of its decision in parliament. The ousted PP prime
minister, Jose Maria Aznar, was accused of provoking the March
11 terror attack in Madrid that cost more than 190 lives and hundreds
of wounded by his backing for the war against Iraq.
The clear implication of the PSOEs call for a parliamentary
debate was that it would be used as a means of opposing the decision
to send troops. This apparent anti-militarist stance won the general
election for the PSOE, when the PP government was kicked out as
a result of the deep antiwar sentiment felt by the Spanish people.
Zapatero was forced to withdraw the Spanish troops from Iraq.
But he is now establishing a legalistic cover for sending troops
to Afghanistan and Haiti instead. While doing so he cynically
declared, Driven by the deepest democratic convictions,
the government does not want to, cannot and will not act against
or behind the backs of the will of the Spanish people.
Ministers have been at pains to deny that increasing the number
of Spanish troops in Afghanistan to over 1,000approximately
the same number as was withdrawn from Iraqis a form of compensation
to the United States. But this is the conclusion that many have
drawn. Doubling the number of troops in Afghanistan by Zapatero
is also seen as a fulfilment by the PSOE government of the promise
made by Aznar before he left office.
The Bush administration reacted with venal hostility to the
withdrawal of Spanish troops from Iraq, accusing the government
of yielding to the terrorists. Questions were raised at the time
about secret discussions between the two governments on the possibility
of Spain sending troops to Afghanistan, in order to allow the
US to release some of its own soldiers present there to be deployed
to Iraq. The Spanish government had indeed indicated at the time
that it would double its military commitment in Afghanistan in
exchange for its withdrawal from Iraq.
Attempts to placate Washington are not all that is involved,
however. Spain is anxious that it is not left behind in the imperialist
scramble for positions in the oil-rich and strategic zones of
the world.
Covering their backs against accusations of duplicity against
sending troops to Afghanistan and Haiti when the government withdrew
troops from Iraq, Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos told
the parliamentary committee it was impossible to ignore
the threat posed by Al Qaeda and said there was no
doubt as to the legitimacy of international intervention in Afghanistan.
A spokesman for Zapatero, Javier Valenzuela, added that the invasion
of Iraq had not been approved by the United Nations Security Council,
while the actions in Afghanistan and Haiti were approved by the
United Nations.
Spain took another step towards a more prominent role in foreign
affairs this month, when a new NATO command centre was opened
in Madrid. The new centre houses the command for NATO ground forces
in southern Europe, replacing a centre whose geographic responsibilities
were limited mainly to southwestern Europe.
See Also:
Spain: PSOE government organises a cover-up
over March 11 bombings
[6 July 2004]
Spain: Zapatero willing to
send troops to Haiti
[16 June 2004]
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