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THE STANS
Afghanistan will not unravel after troop exit: NATO
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Aug 20, 2012


Afghanistan will not unravel into a civil war after the withdrawal of NATO combat troops in two years or return to Taliban rule, a senior NATO diplomat said Monday.

The planned departure of the bulk of US and NATO troops by the end of 2014 has prompted gloomy forecasts of an internecine war pitting proxy forces backed by Pakistan and India.

But NATO's senior civilian representative, Simon Gass, rejected those predictions, arguing Afghan security forces were too strong for the Taliban and that regional powers had no interest in a return to the "dark days" of the 1990s.

"I really don't buy the (civil war) scenario. I think some people find it an attractive scenario because it looks like history rewriting itself," Gass told AFP and Fox News in an interview in Kabul.

"I really don't think that will happen. One of the reasons it won't happen is because Afghanistan's neighbours realise the huge amount of problems that they would face if Afghanistan were tipped into a position of constant conflict and chaos," he said.

Full-blown civil war would result in a massive flow of refugees out of Afghanistan, he said.

"I really don't think any of Afghanistan's neighbours would welcome the instability in this region that would be triggered by that sort of scenario."

He said said Afghan leaders from all parts of the country all desperately want to avoid a return to the anarchy and bloodshed of the 1990s.

"There is one thing that comes across quite strongly, I would describe it as horror at the idea of returning to the dark years, '92 and '93, when the civil war was raging and shells were falling on Kabul.

"Nobody wants to go back there."

Although he acknowledged the Taliban insurgency remains a resilient force that could stage bombings and disruptive assaults, he said the Islamist militants could not defeat Afghan government forces in a direct confrontation.

"I don't know anybody who thinks the Taliban have the military strength to overturn the Afghan security forces," said Gass, a British diplomat and former ambassador to Iran.

"The Taliban don't have anymore the ability to get back into their Hiluxes and drive back into Kandahar. It's just not feasible," he said, referring to the Islamists' former stronghold.

He said that "in order to return to power, the Taliban have to mass.

"If the Taliban mass, they can be hit. That's their fundamental problem. You can't imagine them having success against the ANSF (Afghan national security forces) on the battlefield."

But he acknowledged that Haqqani militants, which stage attacks in eastern Afghanistan from sanctuaries inside Pakistan, remained a serious threat that would require Pakistan's help to counter.

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Insiders focus of US military chief's Afghan trip
Bagram, Afghanistan (AFP) Aug 19, 2012 - The top US military officer Martin Dempsey flew Sunday to Afghanistan to hold talks with senior commanders amid a spate of attacks by Afghan soldiers on their NATO counterparts.

Before landing at the sprawling US air base in Bagram, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff told reporters that the rise in "insider attacks" would be a key focus of his meetings with US-led coalition and Afghan officers.

"As far as the insider threat, of course that's going to be a topic," Dempsey told AFP and Fox News.

Despite expanded efforts to screen recruits and preempt potential turncoat attacks, Dempsey said the number of incidents continues to increase.

"We have an eight-step vetting process that's been in place in earnest for about a year. But we haven't turned the corner on the trend," he said.

Shortly after he spoke, the International Security Assistance Force announced yet another "green-on-blue" attack, with an Afghan in police uniform shooting and killing a NATO soldier in southern Afghanistan. The attack brought the death toll to 40 this year from insider attacks.

But Dempsey said the insider violence would not alter plans for the bulk of NATO combat troops to withdraw by the end of 2014, as agreed at an alliance summit in Lisbon two years ago.

"To this point, we feel committed to the Lisbon objectives and the timetable you're familiar with," the general said.

The attacks threaten to fuel tensions between the NATO-led coalition and their Afghan partners, who are gradually taking over the lead for security as Western troops withdraw.

Dempsey suggested the Afghan government could be doing more to thwart the insider attacks, including speaking out publicly.

The general said he welcomed President Hamid Karzai's statement on Saturday on the problem, saying he hoped similar comments would be made by lower-ranking officials.

"What I would expect to see is that (statement) would be echoed down to the lowest levels," he said.

"We speak about it and we're taking measures to mitigate the risk. But I do think the more they can be as concerned about it as we are, the better off we'll all be."

On Saturday, US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta urged Karzai to bolster cooperation with ISAF forces to contain the insider threat, according to the Pentagon.

Another top American general, General James Mattis, the head of US Central Command, who oversees troops in the Middle East and Afghanistan, was due to join Dempsey for talks on Monday in Kabul.

The two were scheduled to meet the commander of US and NATO troops, General John Allen, and other senior officers, officials said.

Dempsey also said he planned to hold talks with General Shir Mohammad Karimi, the head of Afghan forces.



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THE STANS
Afghan NATO air strike kills militants: ISAF
Kunar, Afghanistan (AFP) Aug 18, 2012
A NATO air strike on Saturday killed at least two dozen militants in eastern Afghanistan, the military alliance's force in the country said. The air strike, carried out with the approval of Afghan forces, came after the allies "observed a large group of insurgents in a remote area and engaged them," a spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force told AFP. "There are no ci ... read more


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