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"What we envision is about a 75,000-person force starting in Africa for training of peacekeepers, people to be available for peacekeeping," Deputy Secretary of State Paul Armitage told a House of Representatives committee.
The pricetag for the program would be "about 100 million dollars the first year and 660 million dollars over the five-year life of this program," which would be financed jointly by the US Defense and State Departments, Armitage testified.
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz told the House Appropriations subcommittee on foreign operations that the force could intervene in countries like the Sudan, where civil war has led to the displacement of thousands of people, and along with other world hotspots.
"This is an initiative designed to train other country's forces, so that when peacekeeping requirements come up, as they did recently in Liberia or as we're facing one in Haiti today, there are more capable foreign forces to draw, on -- so that we're not constantly turning to our military for tasks that could be performed by others."
Wolfowitz stressed that the thrust of the efforts would be peacekeeping.
"They are, by definition, missions that don't involve the kind of combat that our forces can do and do very well," he said.
"We think this is an important initiative is to build capacity so that when there is a desire to accomplish something ... we don't automatically have to turn to American forces, who have enormous stresses on them," Wolfowitz said.
WAR.WIRE |