The US and NATO struggle to maintain troops even as the Taliban reclaim southern and eastern Afghan provinces.
By David Montero
From the August 6, 2008 edition of The Christian Science Monitor
With
The move, the latest in a series, comes just three days after five North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) soldiers were killed in a series of roadside bombings in
The US Defence Department announced yesterday that it would extend by one month the tour of 1,250 Marines, the second such decision in as many months, according to the Associated Press.
The decision to extend the tour of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment in
According to [a senior military] official, the decision to hold the battalion there longer is part of an effort to capitalize on the gains the Marines have made in the training mission. The extension means that the battalion would return home in late November.
The Associated Press report adds that US military planners say they need more troops on the ground.
Commanders have said they need three more combat brigades – or as many as 10,000 troops – to bolster the fight in
Military leaders, however, have made it clear they need to free units from
The Christian Science Monitor recently reported that those three brigades are part of a proposed Afghan surge.
The success of the surge of American troops in
There are currently some 70,000 NATO troops on the ground in
About 2,700 people have been killed this year in fighting with the Taliban, including 800 Afghan security forces, according to calculations by the Associated Press.
The number of Western soldiers killed this year rose by five last Friday, when a series of bombings killed four soldiers in
The new deaths take to 149 the number of mostly Western soldiers to die in
Due to the violence, the
It's no secret that
"Some of our allies do not want to fight, or they impose caveats on where, when and how their forces may be used," [Secretary of Defence Robert Gates] wrote recently in a widely distributed memo.
NATO countries, Gates noted, have two million troops – not counting the
"Yet we struggle to sustain a deployment of less than 30,000 non-U.S. forces in
One country that has answered the call is the
The Czech parliament approved the deployment of up to 415 Czech servicemen in NATO's peacekeeping force in
Ministry spokesman Jan Pejsek says the number of Czech troops serving in the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force could reach some 600 in 2009.
As NATO struggles with troop deployments, violence in
The violence has grown year on year, ruining the post-Taliban government's hopes of rebuilding a country destroyed by decades of war.
An umbrella body of aid groups said Friday that insurgent attacks, bombings and other violent incidents were up by about 50 percent this year compared with the same period last year.
Unrest has spread to once stable areas and welfare agencies were forced to scale back aid delivery even as drought and food price hikes put millions of people in difficulty, the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief said.
Source: http://www.csmonitor.com/
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