Seeing
is believing.
Battered
NATO considering early Afghanistan withdrawal
NATO
could pull its forces from Afghanistan before its planned withdrawal
date of 2014. Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen also conceded
that intensifying green-on-blue attacks could be a premeditated
Taliban ploy.
RT,
2
October, 2012
"From
now until the end of 2014 we will see announcements of redeployments,
withdrawals or drawdown,” Rasmussen told The Guardian. “If the
security situation allows, I would not exclude the possibility that
in certain areas you could accelerate the process."
There
are currently 120,000 NATO troops in the country training a local
force three times this size.
But
Rasmussen admitted that the transition is hindered by a stream of
so-called green-on-blue attacks, where local trainees turn on their
mentors, often unexpectedly and with deadly result. Nearly 50 NATO
troops have been killed in such incidents so far this year.
"There's
no doubt insider attacks have undermined trust and confidence,"
said Rasmussen, who left his post as Prime Minister of Denmark in
2009 to take the top NATO job.
Previously,
NATO claimed the majority of such attacks were isolated incidents
driven by petty conflicts and personal grudges, but Rasmussen
admitted the situation is more complex.
"It's
safe to say that a significant part of the insider attacks are due to
Taliban tactics – probably it is part of a Taliban strategy.”
He
also claimed that not all infiltrations are as intricately planned as
they may seem.
"We
have seen where the militants were in Afghan uniforms, though they
are not members of the Afghan security force.”
Rasmussen
says the ultraconservative Islamist organization hopes to force a
drop in public support for NATO's Afghanistan mission with a constant
drip of negative publicity.
Despite
the morale-draining attacks and the continuing failure to establish
control over the entirety of the mountainous country, Rasmussen
asserted that any withdrawal would not be “a race for the exits,”
and would only happen once the transition is secure.
"Political
decisions will be taken based on … recommendations as to how we
will adapt to the transfer of lead responsibility to the Afghans,"
he promised. "The pace will very much depend on the security
situation on the ground."
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