http://www.thestar.com/business/article/892937--afghanistan-troop-exit-h\
ot-button-at-lisbon-summit
<http://www.thestar.com/business/article/892937--afghanistan-troop-exit-\
hot-button-at-lisbon-summit>       Afghanistan troop exit hot button at
Lisbon         summit
Robert Burns and Slobodan Lekic The Associated Press

LISBON, PORTUGAL—NATO is expected to set itself a         2014
target for handing over security         to Afghans at a summit that
starts here Friday, as the         alliance's appetite for        
the conflict dwindles after nine years of fighting, growing        
European war angst,         and renewed criticism by Afghan President
Hamid Karzai.

The allies appear to agree that         the target year is        
realistic, but that hardly means the war is ending. The U.S. in        
particular is wary of giving the         impression that the original
aim of invading Afghanistan in 2001         — to deny Al        
Qaeda a base from which to launch more terrorist attacks on the        
West — will be         achieved by then.

Prime Minister David Cameron         insisted Thursday that        
British troops will quit their combat role in Afghanistan by        
2015, whatever the         security conditions or progress made in
tackling insurgents.

Cameron said there "wasn't time         for a great strategic
rethink."

NATO plans to pledge an enduring         partnership with Afghanistan at
the two day summit in Lisbon,         while admitting         past
mistakes.

"I think that, seen         retrospectively, we underestimated
the challenge and our operation in Afghanistan didn't have        
sufficient         resources, and yes, that was a mistake," NATO
Secretary-General         Anders Fogh         Rasmussen told
Portugal's Renascenca in comments broadcast         Thursday as
leaders         of the 28 Nato member nations headed to Lisbon.

He added: "We're on the right         track now and that's
why         I'm very optimistic about our Afghanistan        
operation and we'll make a positive announcement in Lisbon —
that the handover is about to         begin."

The escalating war has given the         alliance its biggest        
challenge since it was formed 61 years ago. But victory is far        
from assured,         and a hasty pullout would seriously undermine
confidence in the         alliance on         both sides of the
Atlantic.

Already, some key allies worry         publicly that military        
force is not the best way to put Afghanistan on a track to        
stability.

France's new defence minister, Alain         Juppe, told a radio
interviewer Wednesday         that Afghanistan         is a
"trap" for allied troops. He added, however, that French        
forces will not         withdraw fully until "Afghan authorities
have the situation in         hand."

Some analysts see a grimmer           scenario.

"Success in Afghanistan         is almost impossible," said
Shmuel Bar, a director at the         Institute         of Policy and
Strategy in Herzliya, Israel.         "If NATO is making its future
contingent on victory in         Afghanistan,         they are not
living in the real world. All they can expect to         achieve are
some         limited aims, such as preventing the war from spilling over
into         Pakistan."

Karzai is scheduled to address         Saturday's session. He
caused an international stir by demanding in a Washington Post        
interview last         weekend that NATO reduce its military operations
and stop what         the military         believes is a highly
successful tactic — night raids conducted         jointly with
Afghan troops against suspected Taliban leaders.

NATO's senior civilian         representative in Afghanistan,
Mark Sedwill, said Karzai's comments were unproductive.

"We have different perspectives –         that's
natural,"         Sedwill said. "It is much better if we work
those different         perspectives out in         private."

The Lisbon meeting         unfolds against the backdrop of President
Barack Obama's         internal review of the         war strategy
he announced in December 2009, which included         sending 30,000
extra         U.S. troops to Afghanistan to         regain momentum from
the Taliban. Obama is expected to finish         his review by        
year's end and face a new Congress in January that may        
scrutinize his war         strategy more closely following the
Democrats' loss of the House         and setbacks         in the
Senate.

The NATO leaders are expected to         endorse Karzai's        
proposal that Afghanistan take lead responsibility for security        
— and for the         development of its government institutions and
economic         development — by the         end of 2014. This
process would begin in the first half of next         year with an
unspecified but small number of areas transferred to Afghan        
control.

The plan would allow NATO members         to begin reducing        
their troop contingent of about 140,000, but the full timeline        
has yet to be         determined. Obama has said he will start pulling
out some of the         approximately         100,000 U.S. troops there
next July, but U.S.         officials have said the number going home is
likely to be small.         Others are         leaving sooner.

Canada           said Tuesday its 3,000 troops will end their combat
mission next year, with 950 remaining to train Afghan troops.

German Foreign Minister Guido         Westerwelle said this         week
that his country will begin withdrawing in 2012.

The outlines of a plan to begin a         transition to Afghan        
control, and to make 2014 the target date for completing the        
shift, have been         in the works for many months. But Lisbon
will mark the first public embrace of the plan by NATO heads of        
government.

Working out the details has been         difficult, hampered         by
competing interpretations of how the war is going. Last         April,
when NATO         foreign ministers publicly approved a plan that said
the shift         to Afghan         control would begin before the end
of 2010, there were high         hopes for an         intensifying NATO
offensive in southern Afghanistan. While that         offensive        
has succeeded in capturing or killing large numbers of Taliban        
fighters, the         effect on the war's overall direction is
unclear.

U.S. Gen. David Petraeus, the top         commander of NATO        
forces in Afghanistan,         has offered upbeat public assessments
lately. He is believed to         be concerned,         however, that a
too-fast pullout of allied forces could         jeopardize chances for
consolidating recent battlefield gains.

Other senior officials have         stressed that the pace and        
scale of troop withdrawals be decided as circumstances unfold.

Sedwill has called the 2014 target         date "realistic but
not guaranteed," warning that allied fighting beyond 2014 may be
necessary. NATO's         troop presence may not be heavily reduced
by 2014, he said, but         the mission is         to have shifted to
training and advising the Afghan army and         police rather than
leading combat operations.

Leaders arriving in Lisbon made it         clear they have largely
agreed         on two key elements of the Afghan plan.

Australian Prime Minister Julia         Gillard told Parliament        
she will argue for two outcomes: A transition to Afghan-led        
security by the end         of 2014, and a commitment by NATO and
international         organizations including the         United Nations
and the World Bank not to abandon Afghanistan         after 2014.

The war is increasingly unpopular         with voters in NATO        
nations, and alliance leaders worry about the political fallout        
unless they         agree on a credible withdrawal timeline. As a
result, they are         expected to         unanimously approve the
transition plan.

Allied commanders highlight a         series of advances this        
year against Taliban insurgents in Helmand and Kandahar        
provinces, to emphasize that the         transition strategy is ready.

Thousands of peace activists are expected to arrive in the        
Portuguese capital to demand an immediate         NATO pullout. Protest
leader Reiner Braun complained that         Portuguese border        
police who normally don't check IDs at the border with Spain        
have turned away European pacifists,         including a bus carrying
about 30 from Finland.

Portugal's         Border Service said in a statement that 127
foreigners were         turned away through         Thursday morning for
reasons of national security.

Also Thursday, Portugal's spy         chief resigned on         the
eve of the summit, reportedly because he was angry about        
government budget         cuts. The defence minister said the move will
not affect the         security of NATO         leaders.

Allied casualties in Afghanistan         have reached record        
levels of about 650 dead so far this year, and the Taliban have        
spread into         parts of the country where they were not active
before. They         retain sanctuaries         across the border in
Pakistan.

Marko Papic, a senior analyst at         Stratfor, a global        
intelligence analysis firm, argues that the best the allies can        
now hope for is         to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table.

"With terrorist groups such as the         Al Qaeda shifting        
to other locales, it is not even clear if the original goal of        
the war — to         disable a transnational network of terrorists
— still has any         bearing on the         U.S. and NATO
presence in Afghanistan," he said.


 
<http://www.thestar.com/business/article/892937--afghanistan-troop-exit-\
hot-button-at-lisbon-summit>







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