Santa Fe New Mexican

NATO to send more troops to Afghan War

- By Thomas Gibbons-Neff

BRUSSELS — Nearly three years after NATO ended combat operations in Afghanista­n, the 29-nation alliance will send troops once more into the country with hopes that the renewed surge will help the Afghan military beat back a resurgent Taliban.

Speaking ahead of a defense ministeria­l meeting here Thursday, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g said thousands of troops have been requested, but he did not say how many would deploy.

With the Taliban in control of broad swaths of the country and the Afghan military locked in a primarily defensive war, it is unclear how a new infusion of NATO or U.S. forces could radically turn the tide of the conflict.

“Fifteen nations have already pledged additional contributi­ons to Resolute Support Mission. And I look forward to further announceme­nts from other nations,” Stoltenber­g said, using the name of the NATO mission to Afghanista­n.

Stoltenber­g stressed that NATO’s renewed presence did not mean the beginning of another combat mission; instead, he said, the alliance will focus on building the Afghan special operation forces, air force and other military training institutio­ns.

Stoltenber­g’s remarks come as the United States weighs its own commitment in what has become its longest-running war. In recent weeks, President Trump delegated authoritie­s to the Pentagon to set troop levels in the Afghanista­n, and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis has pledged to present a strategy to Congress by mid-July. Earlier this month, the retired four-star Marine general told lawmakers that the United States was “not winning,” and battlefiel­d commanders, including the head of U.S. forces in Afghanista­n, Gen. John Nicholson, have requested a “few thousand” more troops.

With a Taliban insurgency that has proven resilient despite heavy battlefiel­d losses, lawmakers in Washington and some NATO allies remain wary of any new military solution in Afghanista­n.

In an interview, Canadian Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan said his country has received the request for more troops but has not yet decided to pledge any additional forces.

Canadian soldiers withdrew from Afghanista­n completely in 2014, after participat­ing in several bloody campaigns around Kandahar in 2006 and a limited training mission after 2011. Between 2001 and 2014, more than 150 Canadian troops died in Afghanista­n.

With no physical presence in the country, Canada has instead continued to provide financial support to the Afghan security forces.

“Afghanista­n is obviously very important to us, and we’re going to monitor the situation,” Sajjan said. “The military is not going to give you that complete victory. It takes an entire whole of government approach for it; the real solution will come from the political side.”

British Defense Secretary Michael Fallon told a group of reporters Thursday that Britain was in Afghanista­n “for the long haul” and would send just under 100 additional troops to help prop up Afghan forces around Kabul, bringing the total number of British soldiers in the country to around 600. In the last year, the Afghan capital has been rocked by a spate of terrorist attacks that have killed hundreds.

On his way to Europe on Monday, Mattis said he would spend the defense ministeria­l getting feedback from NATO countries before returning and delivering his formal strategy to Trump.

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