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THE STANS
NATO scales back joint ops with Afghans
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Sept 18, 2012

Rasmussen insists NATO Afghan strategy unchanged
Brussels (AFP) Sept 18, 2012 - NATO strategy in Afghanistan is unchanged and scaling back joint operations with Afghan patrols to prevent further Western deaths by locals is prudent and temporary, NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Tuesday.

Rasmussen, who has previously expressed "deep concerns" over insider attacks on NATO troops with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, stressed that the two sides would continue to work together, "so our strategy remains the same."

NATO remains committed to seeing "Afghans fully in charge of their own security by the end of 2014. That is the bottom line. The goal is unchanged, the strategy remains the same and the timeline remains the same."

Rasmussen rejected suggestions that the move, sparked by a mounting death toll, showed the insurgents were gaining the initiative.

"No, not at all," he said, arguing that the fact the move was possible at all showed that "Afghan security forces are able to operate on their own."

Earlier in Kabul, NATO announced it was cutting joint operations after an unprecedented number of Western soldiers were shot dead by their local colleagues and as anger erupted over an anti-Islam film.

NATO insisted partnering would continue at all levels and presented the decision as a change to mitigate the risk of joint operations, rather than a suspension of joint operations.

Under the new order, NATO and Pentagon officials said most joint patrols and advisory work with Afghans will be conducted at the battalion level and above.

Cooperation at a lower level will have to be "evaluated on a case-by-case basis and approved by" regional two-star commanders, the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.

Although ISAF called the changes "temporary" they also appeared to be indefinite.

Some 36 insider attacks have claimed the lives of 51 troops in the NATO-led coalition so far this year, casting doubt on the credibility of ISAF's "shoulder-to-shoulder" motto.

Commanders believe only a quarter of the assaults are linked to the Taliban.


NATO is scaling back joint operations with Afghans after an unprecedented number of Western soldiers were shot dead by their local colleagues and as anger erupts over an anti-Islam film, officers said Tuesday.

The move marks a setback to the US-led strategy for containing an 11-year Taliban insurgency, as a phased withdrawal of Western troops hinges on training and advising Afghan forces to take their place within two years.

But NATO insisted partnering would continue at all levels and rushed to present the move as a change to mitigate the risk of joint operations, rather than a suspension of joint operations.

NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the strategy in Afghanistan was unchanged and scaling back joint operations in order to prevent further Western deaths by locals was prudent and temporary.

He said NATO remained committed to seeing Afghans in charge of their own security by the end of 2014.

"That is the bottom line. The goal is unchanged, the strategy remains the same and the timeline remains the same," he said, while rejecting suggestions the move showed insurgents were gaining initiative.

Under the new order, NATO and Pentagon officials said most joint patrols and advisory work with Afghans will be conducted at the battalion level and above.

Cooperation at a lower level will have to be "evaluated on a case-by-case basis and approved by" regional two-star commanders, the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.

The scale of attacks by Afghan troops against their NATO allies has never before been seen in modern warfare and both sides have struggled to stem the problem.

The US commander in Afghanistan, General John Allen, "has directed all operational commanders to review force protection and tactical activities in the light of the current circumstances", a US military officer in Washington said in an email.

"This guidance was given at the recommendation of, and in conjunction with, key Afghan leaders," said the officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"This will likely lead to adjustments in exactly how, when and where ISAF troops operate, especially during the current period of heightened tension."

Although ISAF called the changes "temporary" they also appeared to be indefinite.

"We can't say how long this measure will linger on and when we can change it back," ISAF spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Hagen Messer told AFP.

Defence Secretary Leon Panetta, speaking at a news conference in Beijing, said the insider attacks were worrying but insisted they would not derail plans to withdraw troops by the end of 2014 as planned.

"We are concerned with regards to these insider attacks and the impact that they're having on our forces. General Allen has reflected that in the steps that he's taken," Panetta said after holding talks with his Chinese counterpart.

The changes also come following violent protests in Afghanistan and around the world over an amateur, American-made film deemed offensive to Islam.

The film coupled with the wave of "green-on-blue" attacks led to the decision to limit the number of joint patrols and operations, Pentagon spokesman George Little said.

Last Friday the Taliban stormed a major NATO base, killing two US Marines and destroying six US fighter jets to avenge the film, kicking off a weekend that saw six ISAF soldiers shot dead by suspected police.

Around 36 insider attacks have claimed the lives of 51 troops in the NATO-led coalition so far this year, sowing mistrust between the Western force and its nominal allies and casting doubt on the credibility of ISAF's "shoulder-to-shoulder" motto.

Commanders believe only a quarter of the assaults are linked to the Taliban and that the remainder were caused by cultural clashes and personal grievances.

The Afghan army and police rapidly expanded into a contingent of nearly 350,000, and critics say the rush to build a large force meant many recruits were not carefully screened beforehand.

NATO did its best to present the operational changes in a positive light, saying it was not a suspension of operations below the brigade level, but a change to how it assesses and mitigates "the risks associated" with such operations.

"In some cases that may mean a temporary separation or tactical pause but it does not mean we have stopped partnered operations," it insisted.

In London, British Defence Secretary Philip Hammond even went so far as to say the decision had not been formalised.

"This is a draft order that ISAF are looking at and it is going to have minimal impact on our operations. There's no change in policy yet," Hammond told reporters.

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Britain plays down Afghan joint patrols move
London (AFP) Sept 18, 2012 - NATO's reduction of joint patrols with Afghan troops will have a minimal impact on operations and are not a change in strategy, British Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said Tuesday.

Hammond accused the media of overreacting to the decision, made after a spate of "insider attacks" in which Afghan recruits turned their weapons on Western troops preparing them for a security handover in 2014.

The issue led to a stormy session in parliament, with a lawmaker from the opposition Labour party being banned from the House of Commons after calling Hammond a liar.

"There has been no change of policy in Afghanistan," Hammond told lawmakers after he was called to answer an urgent question on the issue.

"The UK partnering and mentoring operations will continue substantially unchanged by this order."

Hammond denied that the move would affect the coalition's war strategy, under which the planned withdrawal of Western troops hinges on training Afghan forces to take over security in just over two years' time.

"We have a strategic plan that takes us to the end of combat operations in 2014, while strengthening the ANSF (Afghan National Security Forces) to take over security responsibility from us."

Hammond said he had not been aware of the order until Monday afternoon, just after he had given a separate statement to parliament.

Labour lawmaker Paul Flynn was suspended from parliament after accusing Hammond, a Conservative, of lying to lawmakers over the danger to troops of prolonging Britain's involvement in Afghanistan.

Flynn said that "brave soldier lions are being led by ministerial donkeys".

Accusing a fellow lawmaker of lying is against the rules of the House of Commons, the lower house of parliament.

Foreign Secretary William Hague earlier gave a similar assurance that Britain's strategy was unchanged.

"It is about assessing and mitigating the risks of conducting partnered operations, but we expect any change or any impact on UK operations to be absolutely minimal," Hague told a committee of lawmakers.

A spokesman for Prime Minister David Cameron meanwhile confirmed the national security council was discussing the Afghan withdrawal timetable at a meeting on Tuesday, but stressed that it was on the agenda before the recent news.

Two British soldiers were among six NATO troops killed in suspected "green-on-blue" shootings by Afghan police at the weekend, causing increasing concern in London.

"How many more wasted lives?" Britain's right-leaning Daily Mail newspaper asked in its front-page headline on Monday.

Hammond said last week that he was considering bringing back some of Britain's 9,500 troops based in Afghanistan earlier than expected.



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THE STANS
Afghan insider attacks are 'last gasp effort' by Taliban: US
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 17, 2012
US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Monday said insider attacks on NATO forces in Afghanistan were a "last gasp" tactic by Taliban insurgents who had been unable to make up lost territory. His comments came after a weekend in which six NATO troops were killed in apparent green-on-blue attacks, and appear to contradict commanders on the ground, who say most of the assaults are the result of ... read more


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