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Posts Tagged ‘Nato’

Afghan bombings kill US Marines

Afghanistan map

Four Nato soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan, the coalition has said.

The troops died in improvised roadside bomb attacks blamed on insurgents, officials said, but did not give further details.

The deaths come at a bloody time for international forces in Afghanistan, with 15 UK soldiers killed in 10 days.

US President Barack Obama has praised the ongoing military effort, saying Taliban rebels are being pushed back as Afghanistan prepares for elections.

US Marines and British troops recently launched a major new offensives against the Taliban in southern regions of Afghanistan.

Casualty figures have spiked in the past few weeks as insurgents have mounted new attacks and military action has increased in intensity.

Reuters news agency reported that a fifth Nato soldier died on Friday from wounds received in June.

In the UK, Prime Minister Gordon Brown has been forced to defend the country’s involvement in the Afghan mission as the numbers of British casualties rises.

Speaking in a Sky TV interview, Mr Obama said the battle in Afghanistan is a "serious fight" but one essential for the future stability of the country.

He said new strategies for building bridges with Afghan society would be considered once the country had held its presidential election.

The country is due to hold a presidential vote in August. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Obama warns Russia on interference

US president goes on first trip to Russia and calls on Moscow to stop viewing America as an enemy

Barack Obama today set out his vision for a new post-cold war world, and urged Russia not to interfere in neighbouring states and to move on “from old ways of thinking”.

In a keynote speech during his first trip to Russia as US president, Obama called on Moscow to stop viewing America as an adversary. The assumption that Russia and the US were eternal antagonists was “a 20th-century view” rooted in the past, he said.

Obama delivered a tough, though implicit, critique of Kremlin foreign policy, rejecting the claim it has “privileged interests” in post-Soviet countries. He said the 19th-century doctrine of spheres of influence and “great powers forging competing blocs” was finished.

“In 2009, a great power does not show strength by dominating or demonising other countries. The days when empires could treat sovereign states as pieces on a chessboard are over,” he said, speaking to graduates from Moscow’s New Economic School.

He added: “As I said in Cairo, given our interdependence any world order that tries to elevate one nation or group of people over another will inevitably fail. That is why I have called for a ‘reset’ in relations between the United States and Russia.

“America wants a strong, peaceful and prosperous Russia.”

Obama acknowledged that the US needed to play its part in bringing about a fresh start with Russia – “a great power”. And he paid tribute to the achievements of Russian writers and scientists, even managing to quote a line from Pushkin when he told the students: “Inspiration is needed in geometry just as much as in poetry.”

Crucially, though, Obama indicated that Washington would not tolerate another Russian invasion of Georgia. Russia is winding up full-scale military exercises next to the Georgian border amid ominous predictions that a second conflict in the Caucasus could erupt this summer.

On Monday Obama reaffirmed Georgia’s sovereignty – severely undermined by last year’s war and Moscow’s subsequent unilateral recognition of rebel-held Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states. Today Obama defended “state sovereignty”, describing it as “a cornerstone of international order”.

He also said that Georgia and Ukraine had a right to choose their own foreign policy and leaders, and could join Nato if they wanted. Russia is deeply opposed to Ukraine’s and Georgia’s accession, and wants the White House to rule out their future membership. Today Obama responded by saying that Nato sought collaboration with Russia, not confrontation.

Earlier, Obama had breakfast with Vladimir Putin, the man whom most people regard as Russia’s real ruler. Last week Obama described Putin, Russia’s prime minister, as having “one foot in the past”. Today, however, he talked to him for two and a half hours – longer than planned and an admission of Putin’s continuing importance. The meeting, their first, was “excellent”, Obama said.

During his speech, however, Obama delivered a withering assessment of Putinism. Without mentioning Russia by name, Obama spelled out the US’s commitment to “universal values”. These included the rule of law, the equal administration of justice, and competitive elections – all things missing from Putin’s vertically managed authoritarian state.

Obama also stressed the importance of “independent media in exposing corruption at all levels of business and government”. Russia’s state-controlled TV has largely snubbed Obama’s first trip to Moscow, apparently on Kremlin orders, either failing to mention him at all or relegating him to the lower regions of the news schedule.

On Monday Obama and Russia’s president, Dmitry Medvedev, agreed a framework document that would see both sides cut their nuclear arsenals by up to a third. Today Obama warned again of the dangers of nuclear proliferation, and urged Moscow to join with the US to stop Iran acquiring nuclear weapons and to end North Korea’s nuclear efforts.

He also reaffirmed that the US would only go ahead with its planned missile defence shield in central Europe – opposed by the Kremlin – if there was an Iranian nuclear “threat”. He said neither the US or Russia would benefit from a nuclear arms race in east Asia or the Middle East.

“In the short period since the end of the cold war we have already seen India, Pakistan and North Korea conduct nuclear tests. Without a fundamental change, do any of us truly believe that the next two decades will not bring about the further spread of nuclear weapons?” he asked.

“That is why America is committed to stopping nuclear proliferation, and ultimately seeking a world without nuclear weapons … And while I know this goal won’t be met soon, pursuing it provides the legal and moral foundation to prevent the proliferation and eventual use of nuclear weapons.”

The White House billed Obama’s Moscow address as a “major foreign policy speech”. It is the third in a series of major speeches that began in April in Prague, where he discussed disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation, and continued in Cairo, where he offered a fresh US approach to the Middle East and Muslim communities.

Later, Obama met the former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev. He is due to meet business leaders and hold talks with civil society activists, including the opposition leader and former world chess champion Gary Kasparov.

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US marines pour into Helmand

Huge assault to take and hold river valley in bid to increase security for local population ahead of elections

The US poured 4,000 marines into Afghanistan’s Helmand province today in its biggest operation for five years to try to wrest the poppy-filled river valley permanently from the Taliban.

In helicopters, armoured vehicles and on foot, the marines fanned out to Afghan villages in two districts previously dominated by insurgents in a mission codenamed Operation Khanjar (Sword Strike).

Reports from the two districts, Nawa and Garmsir, said the offensive met only modest resistance. However, marine officers said that they had expected the Taliban to slip away and deliver their response with roadside bombs and ambushes. One marine was killed and others injured.

Pakistan posted troops across the border from Helmand in an effort to block a Taliban retreat into Pakistan, a tactic that has hitherto allowed the insurgents to withstand successive Nato offensives. But Pakistani officials said they had not sent more soldiers to the border. They simply redeployed their existing garrison.

The operation represents a shift in Nato strategy, putting primary emphasis on protecting the local population and providing a sense of security, rather than on killing Taliban fighters. If successful, it is likely to be used as a model for other offensives across the south and east.

The marines are under orders to set up outposts in the villages and stay there to convince local people that the Taliban will not be allowed to return and that it will be safe to take part in next month’s presidential elections. The Taliban have threatened to kill anyone taking part in the elections, which Nato sees as essential in bolstering the credibility of the Kabul government.

Captain Bill Pelletier, a spokesman for US forces in Afghanistan, reflected the new hearts and minds approach when, after disclosing US casualties, he stressed there had not been civilian casualties or damage to property, and added there had been no artillery or other indirect fire “and no bombs have been dropped from aircraft”. Anthony Cordesman, one of the best-known military strategists in the US, who is based at Washington’s Centre for Strategic and International Studies, agreed that the US was shifting its strategy to a “shape, clear, hold and build” one that focused on lasting security and development of population centres rather than simply defeating insurgents in the field and remote areas. Crucial to its success would be a bigger effort by the Afghan government, he said. There was disappointment among American forces that only 600 Afghan government troops were available to join the operation.

Cordesman, who is in Afghanistan, said coalition forces could clearly win tactical battles. The question was whether coalition forces “can work with Afghan forces to actually hold population centres, provide security and economic opportunity and reverse the growth of Taliban and [Pakistan-based Siraj] Haqqani presence and influence”.

He added: “The battles in Helmand are only a first step in this process, which will take at least two years and require a far more honest and effective effort by the Afghan government to serve the Afghan people and win their support than has taken place to date.”

The current US operation was preceded and complemented by a British airborne assault north of Lashkar Gah, just over a week ago codenamed Panther’s Claw, intended to wrest control of river crossings from the Taliban and expanding the area under British control, also with the aim of preparing the ground for elections.

“This is a very specific example of fighting for democracy,” said Michael Clarke, the director of the Royal United Services Institute. “This is all about taking and occupying ground so people can register for the August elections. That’s what is at stake here. That’s how it will be judged.”

The American troops have been told by their new commander, Lieutenant General Stanley McChrystal, that avoiding civilian casualties is a priority, and that if there is a risk of killing the local people in a fight with the Taliban, they should pull back and return another day.

“This could provide a blueprint for future operations around the south and east of Afghanistan,” said Christopher Langton, a military analyst at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. “McChrystal has made himself quite clear. We won’t expect to see 500lb bombs dropped from high altitude. I think they have finally woken up to this. It was something that was losing them the war.”

McChrystal was unexpectedly appointed commander in Afghanistan last month to replace General David McKiernan. McChrystal was overall commander of US special forces and a counter-intelligence specialist, whereas McKiernan was a more traditional battlefield soldier.

McChrystal fitted in better with the kind of new thinking Barack Obama wanted in Afghanistan. Obama sees a military solution alone as doomed to failure and wants US forces to work in parallel with development of a civilian infrastructure to help

His message of protecting civilians to win hearts and minds was reinforced by the marine brigade commander, Brigadier General Lawrence Nicholson. “Our focus is not the Taliban,” he told his officers, according to the Washington Post. “Our focus must be on getting this government back up on its feet.”

“We’re doing this very differently,” Nicholson said. “We’re going to be with the people. We’re not going to drive to work. We’re going to walk to work.”

David Benest, who served as a British counter-insurgency adviser in Afghanistan last year said: “This is exactly what I recommended last April. I said then either we did a hell of a lot more ourselves, or accept the need for the Americans in there. It’s the only way forward.”

Benest added that the flaw in the operation appeared to be the limited role played Afghan troops. Only 500 went into battle with the 4,000 US marines. He said: “What’s missing is a strong statement from the Afghan government saying: This is our war.’ It’s just not there.”

Gilles Dorronsoro, in a new report this week for the Washington-based Carnegie Endowment, sees the focus on Helmand as a mistake. He argues that the US should concentrate instead on fighting them in the north and around Kabul where they are making alarming progress before taking them on in their strongholds in the south and east.

He said: “The Taliban have a strategy and a coherent organisation to implement it, and they have been successful so far. They have achieved most of their objectives in the south and east and are making inroads in the north. They are unlikely to change in the face of the US troop surge.”

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