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US prepares to increase occupation forces in Afghanistan
By Joe Kay
27 December 2007
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The Bush administration is preparing to significantly increase
US troop levels in Afghanistan in an attempt to quell growing
popular hostility to the US and NATO occupying forces. It is doing
so with full confidence that it will face no significant opposition
from the Democratic-controlled Congress.
On the contrary, much of the criticism from leading Democrats
of the administrations conduct of the war in Iraq has been
based on the charge that the US preoccupation with Iraq has diverted
troops and resources from what they claim is the real center of
the war on terrornamely, Afghanistan. Leading
candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination such as
Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have pledged, if elected, to
increase US troop levels in Afghanistan.
The entire American political establishment supports an indefinite
US presence in the country, which occupies a critical geo-strategic
position bordering Iran and Pakistan.
These preparations were underscored at a press conference held
December 21 by Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Joint Chiefs
of Staff General James Cartwright. Gates insisted, NATOs
efforts to rebuild and secure [Afghanistan] must be sustained
and expanded into next year and beyond. He indicated that
about 7,500 more troops were needed to bolster the occupation.
There are currently about 26,000 US soldiers in Afghanistan,
12,000 of whom operate independently and 14,000 of whom are part
of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).
The NATO force, which consists of 40,000 personnel, includes soldiers
from Canada, Australia, Britain, Germany, France, and other European
countries.
In its report on the news conference, the Wall Street Journal
noted, A senior Pentagon official said sending additional
US troops to Afghanistan was clearly something that is being
strongly considered. He said it likely would be several
months before any new forces were deployed, given the militarys
manpower strains because of the Iraq war.
There have been growing concerns within the US military and
the ruling elite as a whole that the situation in Afghanistan
is spiraling out of control. Any partial drawdown of US troops
from Iraq in the coming months, as the tours of duty of troops
sent there as part of Bushs surge come to an
end, will likely be accompanied by an escalation of the US presence
in Afghanistan.
The US is also looking for ways to increase the size of its
military to confront a severe shortage of soldiers resulting from
the simultaneous colonial-style operations in Afghanistan and
Iraq. At the same time, the Bush administration has by no means
ruled out military action against Iran.
According to a New York Times article on December 16,
the Bush administration is deeply concerned about the prospect
of failure in Afghanistan and has initiated three separate
reviews to develop a new strategy. If these reviews do not lead
to a surge on the same level as the increase in US
forces in Iraq earlier this year, the Times noted, this
is mostly because there are no American troops readily available.
A United Nations report published earlier this year found that
2007 was the most violent year in Afghanistan since the invasion
in 2001. The violent incidents tabulated by the UN did not include
casualties of US and NATO military operations.
Though there is no official calculation of this latter figure,
air strikes against towns and presumed Taliban targets were up
sharply this year. Earlier this month, NATO troops recaptured
the city of Musa Qala in the south after a protracted operation.
The town was controlled by Taliban forces for 10 months.
Gates said at his press conference that the increase in violence
in Afghanistan was due in part to much more aggressive actions
on the part of the NATO alliance and the US forces that are there.
The growth of opposition to the US-led occupation of Afghanistan
has been brought on by an escalating social crisis in the country.
A December 17 article in the Washington Post noted, Administration
officials say the White House has become more concerned in recent
months about the situation in Afghanistan, where grinding poverty,
rampant corruption, poor infrastructure and the growing challenge
from the Taliban are hindering US stabilization efforts. Senior
administration officials now believe Afghanistan may pose a greater
longer-term challenge than Iraq.
Gates alluded to Democratic support for increased US troop
levels in Afghanistan in his press conference. Asked if he thought
sending troops returning from Iraq to Afghanistan would cause
political problems for the administration, he replied, I
dont think theres a political constraint.
In addition to increasing its own presence in Afghanistan,
the US is also pressing other members of the NATO coalition to
increase the size of their forces and remove restrictions on the
type of operations these forces are allowed to engage in. At a
NATO meeting earlier this month, Gates criticized European powers
for not doing enough to aid the occupation in Afghanistan.
At his press conference, Gatess tone was less confrontational,
and he acknowledged that many of the governments participating
in the ISAF confront a hostile population at home. Gates said
that the US must find ways to help the European governments
perhaps persuade their people of the value and importance of the
mission in Afghanistan. He suggested that it was necessary
to look for more creative ways in which the allies can be
helpful.
Other comments have been more critical. Democratic Representative
Joe Sestak, a retired admiral and former staff member of the National
Security Council, complained earlier this month, The Germans,
the Spanish, the Italians dont send any troops to the south
except for 250 troops by Germany. He said that some of the
countries refuse to do combat ops at night and some dont
fly when the first snowflake falls.
In an apparent response to this pressure, French President
Nicolas Sarkozy made a surprise trip to Afghanistan on Saturday,
where he announced that France might increase the number of its
soldiers in the country. There are currently some 1,100 French
troops in Afghanistan. Sarkozy has sought to align French foreign
policy closer to that of Washington, and has backed the Bush administrations
threats and provocations against Iran.
The British Labour government of Gordon Brown is widely expected
to increase its forces as well, which are currently at 7,800.
Australias new prime minister, Kevin Rudd of the Labor Party,
was in Afghanistan over the weekend, pledging continued support
for the US-backed government of Hamid Karzai.
See Also:
Reports document deepening social catastrophe
in Afghanistan
[19 December 2007]
Recapture of Afghan town highlights crisis
of US, NATO occupation
[13 December 2007]
UN report into worst Afghan
atrocity implicates security forces
[30 November 2007]
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