http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jcvyk85-txa-h8FQq9am834aJLnwD9CCEKOO0


Associated Press 
December 4, 2009


NATO chief says 25 countries to help in Afghan war
By ROBERT BURNS 


BRUSSELS: NATO's top official said Friday that at least 25 countries will send 
a total of about 7,000 additional forces to Afghanistan next year "with more to 
come," as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton sought to bolster 
allied resolve.

"With the right resources, we can succeed," NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh 
Rasmussen told a news conference after allied foreign ministers met with 
representatives of non-NATO countries that have forces in Afghanistan.

Clinton, who participated in the session, also was making a pitch to a 
NATO-only meeting later Friday for further support of the U.S. war plan.

Clinton told reporters traveling with her from Washington that she was 
encouraged by an expected series of announcements by allied nations of 
additional military, civilian and financial support in Afghanistan.

Fogh Rasmussen told an opening session at NATO headquarters that he hoped 
allied governments will answer President Barack Obama's call for additional 
support. The coming year, he predicted, "will see a new momentum in this 
mission."

Clinton was attending a string of meetings here with allied foreign ministers 
and with representatives of non-NATO countries that have troops in Afghanistan, 
plus Russia. She sought to rally support for Obama's revamped war strategy, 
which banks on major new allied contributions, not just to escalate the combat 
effort but also to bolster civilian functions and provide more development aid.

Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top American commander in Afghanistan, also was 
attending the meeting of NATO's main political council to explain the 43-nation 
military mission, which he has sought to revise and reinforce since he took 
over command last June. He has described conditions in the fight against 
Taliban extremists — now in its ninth year — as serious and deteriorating.

Allied governments need to be able to sell their publics on the idea of 
enlarging the war, and particularly those countries in which political parties 
share power have to be sure "the political stars are in alignment" before they 
announce new commitments, Clinton said.

The British foreign secretary, David Miliband, sketched out the threat to 
Europe posed by Afghanistan's instability.
....
Clinton departed the U.S. capital Thursday shortly after testifying before the 
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where she joined Defense Secretary Robert 
Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in defending 
the president's decision to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan.

Clinton told reporters she was pleased that allies have responded positively to 
the Obama plan.

Fogh Rasmussen said Wednesday that the allies will contribute at least 5,000 
more troops to the war effort "and probably a few thousand more."

The U.S. now has about 71,000 troops in Afghanistan, while 42 other NATO and 
non-NATO nations have a total of 38,000 troops there. They are fighting a far 
smaller collection of Taliban militants who enjoy a haven across the border in 
Pakistan.

European countries have been reluctant to add large numbers of soldiers to a 
war that often looks unwinnable and to support an Afghan government tainted by 
corruption and election fraud. Some leaders are waiting for an international 
conference on Afghanistan in London in late January before promising any more 
troops.

Asked about the criticism that has focused on Obama's decision to announce a 
date in 2011 to begin the withdrawal of American troops from Afghanistan, 
Clinton said that it has been misunderstood by some and that others were simply 
seeking to create a controversy.

She also took a gentle stab at the Bush administration's approach to running 
the war. She said Afghanistan's defense chief had told her last month that for 
the first time he felt like a full participant in the NATO military structure, 
as a result of changes made by McChrystal, who was appointed to the top command 
by Obama several months after he took office. Referring to the more limited 
Afghan participation before McChrystal's arrival, she said, "That's a little 
bit discouraging, when one looks back."
....
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