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THE STANS
No timeframe for US shift in Afghanistan: Panetta
by Staff Writers
Halifax, Canada (AFP) Nov 18, 2011

German minister meets Karzai ahead of conference
Kabul (AFP) Nov 19, 2011 - German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle was in Kabul Saturday for talks with President Hamid Karzai before a key international conference in Bonn on Afghanistan's future, the Afghan foreign ministry said.

The Bonn conference on December 5 will discuss Afghanistan's future beyond 2014, when NATO-led international combat troops will leave, and comes ten years after a previous landmark meeting on Afghanistan in the German city.

Westerwelle and Karzai plus Afghan foreign minister Zalmai Rassoul were meeting to "discuss the outline of Afghanistan's expectations in Bonn", foreign ministry spokesman Janan Mosazai told AFP.

He added that Afghanistan had already presented Germany with a document outlining how it sees its "long-term partnership with the international community and their mutual obligations".

The two sides were also discussing German preparations for the Bonn conference, Mosazai said.

More than 90 delegations from around the world are expected to gather in Bonn next month.

NATO-led combat troops are scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of 2014, and the Afghan government is set to take full responsibility for security.

There are currently 140,000 international forces in the country, mostly from the United States.

The Bonn conference is expected to discuss the transition, stalled efforts to reconcile with the Taliban, and regional and international involvement in Afghanistan after 2014.

Westerwelle also visited Afghanistan's neighbour Pakistan on Friday ahead of the event.

Afghanistan and the United States have often accused elements in Pakistan of supporting the Afghan Taliban as a means of offsetting the growing power of its arch-rival India.


Pentagon chief Leon Panetta said Friday it was too early to say when US forces might pull back from combat operations in Afghanistan after the US Marine Corps commander suggested the move might come within a year for his forces.

Panetta, speaking during a visit to Canada, said the United States and its allies were working to eventually hand over combat duties to Afghan forces but there was no deadline for the transfer.

"We're moving in the right direction," he told reporters at a joint news conference with Canada's Defence Minister Peter MacKay.

"We're trying to get the Afghan army and the Afghan police to assume more of the responsibilities with regards to combat operations. But this is going to take a transition period and I would not assign a particular date or timeframe for that," he said.

The Pentagon chief was asked about comments from the commandant of the US Marine Corps, General James Amos, who said in an interview that he expected Marines in the southern Helmand province to shift in coming months from fighting insurgents to training and advising Afghan forces.

"Im pretty confident... that over the next 12 months that we can transition from what you would call classic counter-insurgency operations to... training and advising" Afghan forces, Amos said in an interview with The Hill newspaper.

The roughly 20,000 Marines deployed in Helmand are "working really hard" to bolster local governments and security forces there, the general said.

"Im very confident that the Afghans can take care of this on their own," Amos was quoted as saying.

The general's comments follow signals from the Pentagon that commanders are looking at a change in strategy that would mean taking a supporting role as soon as next year, which could possibly pave the way for a faster drawdown of US troops.

Such a change would allow more time for coalition troops to build up the Afghan forces and provide help when things go wrong, officials say.

Under current plans endorsed by NATO, the US-led force is due to hand over security for the whole country by the end of 2014, though US officials have hinted at a possible smaller, follow-on force.

With 97,000 US troops and 45,000 allied soldiers, the NATO-led force has concentrated on rolling back Taliban insurgents in towns and cities while training Afghan army and police.

US commanders have tended to push for more time for combat operations and for delaying withdrawals of troops as much as possible, but some inside and outside the Pentagon are arguing for handing over to Afghan forces sooner while more NATO boots are still on the ground.

MacKay suggested the NATO-led coalition was hoping to push the transition effort forward at a more rapid pace.

"There is a desire in fact, and I would suggest it's happening, to meet and exceed timelines. Whether we'll get there is going to depend on this very focused effort to train Afghan security forces," he told reporters.

MacKay and Panetta were speaking at the start of the Halifax International Security Forum, which gathers defense ministers from around the world.

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Two Afghan policemen killed by NATO troops: police
Ghazni, Afghanistan (AFP) Nov 19, 2011 - NATO-led forces have shot and killed two Afghan policemen at a checkpoint in southeast Afghanistan, a local police chief said Saturday.

The incident happened due to a "misunderstanding" between international troops and the Afghan forces, who are jointly fighting a ten-year Taliban-led insurgency in Afghanistan, the chief said.

The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said its troops opened fire after coming under attack from rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and guns. It is launching an investigation into what happened.

The shooting took place late Friday on the outskirts of the southeastern city of Ghazni when Afghan police tried to stop an ISAF convoy, provincial police chief Dilawar Zahid told AFP.

"Last night, a convoy of foreign forces from Kabul were heading towards Ghazni when they were stopped by Afghan police. They opened fire on the police checkpoint, killing two police and wounding three," he said.

He added that the Afghan police were in uniform and manning an official checkpoint at one of the gates to Ghazni city.

It is thought there was uncertainty among foreign forces as to whether it was an official checkpoint or not.

In a statement, ISAF said that a joint coalition and Afghan patrol were fired at "by individuals at an Afghan national security force checkpoint".

"The security force requested air support in an attempt to de-escalate the situation," ISAF said.

"After multiple attempts to identify themselves as friendly forces, the security force was unable to stop the threat and engaged the checkpoint in self-defense, killing two individuals."

There are around 140,000 international troops stationed in Afghanistan, assisting Afghan government forces in fighting the Taliban who were ousted from power by a US-led invasion in 2001.

There have been a string of instances of Afghan forces opening fire on ISAF troops, including at camps where the two groups live side-by-side and ISAF forces mentor their Afghan counterparts.

Three Australian soldiers were wounded this month when a rogue Afghan soldier opened fire on them in the southern province of Uruzgan before going on the run.

That came less than a fortnight after another Afghan soldier killed three Australians and wounded seven others when he opened fire at a parade in Kandahar province, also in the troubled south.



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THE STANS
Afghanistan faces 'regional war' if NATO troops go
Washington (AFP) Nov 17, 2011
Afghanistan risks falling into civil and regional war if all US and international troops leave as planned by the end of 2014, the conflict-wracked state's former interior minister warned on Thursday. Mohammad Haneef Atmar, speaking in Washington, also said Kabul's efforts to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table, which the United States sees as crucial to a peace settlement, had failed ... read more


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