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Rice and Miliband visit Afghanistan as US demands more European
troops
By Harvey Thompson
9 February 2008
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US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and British Foreign
Secretary David Miliband arrived in Afghanistan February 7 on
an unannounced visit aimed at publicizing the military support
of the two main occupation powers for the regime of President
Hamid Karzai.
The visit comes after Rice, Prime Minister Gordon Brown and
Miliband met in London in a public show of support aimed at applying
pressure on NATO countriesespecially Germany and Franceto
send more combat troops to the volatile southern regions of Afghanistan.
Speaking after the meeting, Rice said, I do think the alliance
is facing a real test here. Our populations need to understand
this is not a peacekeeping mission.... This is a different fight
from what NATO was structured to do.
The backdrop to these events was an announcement by Britain
that is would be sending 600 additional troops to Afghanistan,
bringing the total number of UK troops there to around 7,800.
Defence officials have reported that all three regular battalions
of the UK Parachute Regiment will provide the main support of
the 16 Air Assault Brigade when it takes over in April from the
existing UK infantry brigade currently based in Helmand province,
Southern Afghanistan. Pressure on the army has meant the brigade
has had to scavenge troops from other regiments to fill manpower
gaps. It is believed to be the first time so many paratroopers
have been sent on a joint combat mission since World War II.
A significant contingent of the newly deployed British troops
could be sent to the town of Musa Qala in Helmand province, which
was recaptured from the Taliban in December but remains in a precarious
position.
The Rice-Miliband visit to Afghanistan coincided with a meeting
of NATO defence ministers in Vilnius, Lithuania, which was dominated
by the mounting crisis in Afghanistan.
Against a background of transatlantic recrimination over troop
contributions to Afghanistan and where to deploy them, US Defense
Secretary Robert Gates, speaking during a Senate hearing on Pentagon
spending plans, said, I worry a great deal about the alliance
evolving into a two-tiered alliance, in which you have some allies
willing to fight and die to protect peoples security, and
others who are not.... And I think that it puts a cloud over the
future of the alliance, if this is to endure and perhaps even
get worse. There are allies that are doing their part and are
doing well. The Canadians, the British, the Australians, the Dutch,
the Danes are really out there on the line and fighting, but there
are a number of others that are not.
Gates had earlier said that he had yet to receive any replies
from a letter he had sent to all defence ministers in NATO asking
them to contribute more troops and equipment to Afghanistan. Ive
been working this problem pretty steadfastly for many months at
this point, and I would say that I am not particularly optimistic,
Gates told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
These and other comments indicate a number of serious fault
lines opening up in the military alliance over Afghanistan, as
the US, aided in particular by its junior partner Britain, seeks
to push the other European powers further into the Afghan quagmire
than they wish to go.
In the past few weeks; the Dutch government called in the US
ambassador for a dressing down after Gates bluntly said the Europeans
were no good at counterinsurgency. Gates seemed to have retreated,
but then wrote a stern letter to Berlin demanding that German
soldiers put their lives on the line in combat in the dangerous
South instead of enjoying the relatively comfortable conditions
of the North.
An angry German response followed. German Chancellor Angela
Merkel said Germanys limited mandate was not up for
discussion. The former German foreign minister and leading
member of the Green Party, Joschka Fischer, however, signalled
a warmer response amongst official opinion that also includes
two former Bundeswehr generals.
Meanwhile, Canada warned NATO that it might pull out of Afghanistan
by 2009 unless other countries deployed more troops to the areas
experiencing the heaviest fighting.
There have also been criticisms of British military policy
in Afghanistan by at least two US generals. Britains role
in Afghanistan was also openly criticised for the first time by
Karzai, just before he vetoed the expected appointment of the
former British MP and paratrooper, Lord Paddy Ashdown, to the
position of UN envoy to Afghanistan. Some commentators have pointed
out that this may be part electioneering, as Karzai needs to shrug
off his image as a Western puppet before elections due next year.
Writing in the Guardian newspaper (The war that
can bring neither peace nor freedom), Seumas Milne offered
this analysis on Karzais present position: Karzai
was, after all, installed by the US after the overthrow of the
Taliban regime in 2001 and subsequently confirmed in bogus US-orchestrated
elections three years later. If even someone regarded as a US-British
stooge, whose writ famously barely runs outside Kabul, is reduced
to protesting in public that his western protectors are doing
more harm than good, that not only makes a mockery of the idea
that Afghanistan is an independent state. It also strongly suggests
this is a man who recognises that the occupation forces may not
be around indefinitelyand he may have to come to more serious
terms with the local forces that will.
A senior NATO diplomat said in Vilnius, Events in Afghanistan
have become a motor for the transformation of the alliance.
Victoria Nuland, the US ambassador to NATO, commenting on the
recent Pentagon decision to send a further 3,200 US Marines to
Afghanistan, said, We will again challenge our allies to
match us soldier for soldier, euro for dollar.
Daniel Korski of the European Council on Foreign Relations,
said, The Anglo-American strategy in Afghanistan has hit
an absolute low mark. If European countries are unwilling to send
more troops, trainers and civilians to the Afghan mission, then
the US needs to do so itself. To halt a spring offensive by the
Taliban, more than 10,000 extra troops would be needed. Its
now a question of surge or succumb.
NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said the failure
of NATOs mission in Afghanistan could result in terror attacks
in Western countries. Speaking ahead of the Vilnius meeting, and
echoing comments made earlier by Rice, he told the BBC, This
is the front line in the fight against terrorism, and what is
happening in the Hindu Kush matters, because if terrorism is not
dealt with in Afghanistan, the consequences will be felt not just
in Afghanistan and the region, but also in London, Brussels and
Amsterdam.
US President George Bush is to meet with Scheffer on February
29.
Despite the joint photo-shoots and public shows of unity over
the past few days, it is clear that there is a growing swell of
tensions threatening to erupt amongst the major powers over Afghanistan.
The worsening situation for the occupation forces is the main
driving force behind these tensions. To give just one indication
of the changes since the initial US-led invasion, between 2001
and 2005 there were just five suicide bombings across Afghanistan;
in 2007 there were 140.
In the period immediately following the 2001 US-led invasion,
the faked pretext of redressing the atrocities perpetrated in
New York on September 11 of that year and the rapid overthrow
of the universally discredited Taliban regime served to mask the
differences between the imperialist powers occupying Afghanistan.
Rice sought again to revive this deception during her recent visit
to London, declaring, A failed state of Afghanistan brought
us the worst terrorist attack in the United States in our history.
Today it is a changed situation. The invasion of Afghanistan
by the US was always about the assertion of Americas geopolitical
interests in the central Asian region and its strategic control
of land and resources. A share of that control was also the reason
for the participation of the lesser powers such as Britain.
The major European powers, however, are not simply prepared
to bow to demands to rush to the Bush administrations aid
as a result of the failure of its efforts to stabilise Afghanistan
and secure its control without gaining influence for themselves.
It is based on such calculations that France is reportedly considering
sending troops to fight in Southern Afghanistans Kandahar
province.
See Also:
Joschka Fischer demands German combat
troops be sent to southern Afghanistan
[6 February 2008]
Ahead of NATO meeting: New US reports
warn of failure in Afghanistan
[5 February 2008]
British plans to arm Afghan
militias reignite tensions with US
[29 January 2008]
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