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Tensions cast doubts over Nato’s role in
Afghanistan
By PASCAR MALLER
BRUSSELS: Tensions between Nato allies, notably with the United States, and
doubts about the powers of a new UN envoy are a sign of growing pressure as
the alliance struggles in Afghanistan, experts say.
A new peak was reached last week, when US defence secretary Robert Gates hit
out at allied operations against Taliban fighters in south Afghanistan,
which led to the Netherlands summoning the US ambassador for an explanation.
“The bitter criticism by Gates of the way that close US allies like Britain
are conducting anti-insurgency operations is the sign of growing anger with
the Europeans in Washington,” Joseph Herontin at the RMES network of
strategic studies in Brussels, said.
While Gates later embarked on a fence mending exercise by praising those in
the south – like Britain, Canada, Denmark and the Netherlands – some of his
criticism was due, the Belgian expert said.
“Without sufficient numbers on the ground, the Dutch troops, for example,
tend to use their artillery and this causes deaths among the civilian
population,” he said.
However, Herontin said, “in terms of counter-insurgency, British, Dutch and
Canadian forces are not so bad, and the Americans aren’t as good as Gates
suggests.”
Elsewhere, Germany’s former chief of defence staff Klaus Naumann made an
extraordinary outburst last week, accusing Berlin of a lack of solidarity.
He was critical of its refusal to deploy German soldiers from the north to
more dangerous areas near the mountainous southern border with Pakistan.
“The time has come for Germany to think whether it wants to be a reliable
alliance partner,” he said. “The obligation doesn’t stop in certain
geographical regions.”
Wherever the troops may be based, overall numbers remain a concern for
commanders on the ground.
They are demanding an additional 7,500 troops, even though the Nato-led
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) keeps growing – from around
33,000 last January 2007 to some 42,000 in December.
Last Tuesday, the United States said it would send 3,200 marines, with about
two-thirds to be deployed to the south for seven months, in time for yet
another anticipated Taliban-led offensive in the spring.
The fighting has left around 6,000 people dead, including some 220
international soldiers trying to help spread the rule of president Hamid
Karzai’s government to outlying areas, as well as foster reconstruction.
But no matter how much firepower they have, according to Ronald Asmus,
expert at the German Marshall Fund, success will not be achieved until there
is good governance and the Afghan army can handle security.
He said that ISAF commanders “know that even if they do everything right
militarily, we can lose this war”.
Indeed most experts agree that the biggest problem lies outside the military
sphere and is due to the lack of a serious plan and vision for what is
Nato’s most ambitious mission ever and its links to civilian efforts.
“The most glaring challenge is the lack of a coordinated strategy both at
the military level and in the area of post-conflict reconstruction,”
Julianne Smith at Washington’s Center for Strategic and International
Studies, said.
To address that in part, the United Nations is due to appoint soon British
diplomat Paddy Ashdown – an energetic former envoy to Bosnia and once a
marine – in a new more powerful civilian position.
But it is unclear if he will be able to coordinate the strands of
international and Afghan efforts.
“Unless the coordinator presides over a pooled international budget for
Afghanistan, including security sector reform, development aid and counter
narcotics, he will just become another agency that needs to be coordinated,”
Barnett Rubin, a pre-eminent Afghan expert at New York University, said.
The tensions, due to this glaring need for a comprehensive strategy, are set
to cast a cloud over the upcoming summit of Nato leaders, in Bucharest from
April 2 to 4. – AFP
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