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Pentagon conducts secret war game on Afghan options: report
Washington (AFP) Oct 26, 2009 Top Pentagon military officers conducted a secret war game this month to evaluate the two primary military options considered under a broad White House review of the Afghan war, The Washington Post reported Monday. Citing unnamed senior military officials, the newspaper said Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen led the exercise himself. The game examined the likely outcome of sending 44,000 more troops into the country to conduct a full-scale counterinsurgency effort aimed at building a stable Afghan government that can control most of the country, the report said. But it also examined adding 10,000 to 15,000 more soldiers and Marines as part of an approach that the military has dubbed "counterterrorism plus," the paper noted. The Pentagon war game did not formally endorse either course, The Post reported. Instead, it tried to gauge how Taliban fighters, the Afghan and Pakistani governments and NATO allies might react to either of the scenarios, the paper pointed out. Mullen has discussed its conclusions with senior White House officials. One of the exercise's key assumptions was that an increase of 10,000 to 15,000 troops would not in the near future give US commanders the forces they need to take back havens from the Taliban commanders in southern and western Afghanistan, The Post said. "We were running out the options and trying to understand the implications from many different perspectives, including the enemy and the Afghan people," the paper quotes one senior military official as saying.
related report US military cooperation with pro-Western Georgia has strained ties between the United States and Russia, which last year fought a five-day war with Georgia. "The exercises are aimed at training Georgian servicemen to be deployed within the framework of the ISAF (International Security Assistance Force)," Georgian defence ministry spokeswoman Salome Makharadze told AFP. "The exercises will last for two weeks and involve a total of 840 servicemen, 420 Georgians and the same number of Americans," she added. She said the 420 Georgian troops will leave for Afghanistan next spring and serve under US command. A company of Georgian servicemen is also to be sent to Afghanistan next month to serve under French command, Makharadze said. She could not specify how many Georgian troops would take part, but a company typically consists of 100-200 servicemen. The US embassy said in a statement that the exercise, called Immediate Response, "is specifically designed to enhance Georgia's ability to conduct joint counter-insurgency operations in Afghanistan together with US forces." Moscow has accused Washington of meddling in the region and of rearming Georgia. More than 100,000 foreign troops, most of them Americans, are stationed in Afghanistan, fighting an increasingly bloody insurgency being waged by the Taliban and its allies. About 2,000 Georgian troops were deployed with US forces in Iraq from August 2003 but were rushed back to Georgia in August last year for the war with Russia over the breakaway region of South Ossetia.
earlier related report Obama flew to a naval air station in Florida to address servicemen and women after meeting his top national security advisors, as critics accused him of "dithering" in a vital test of his role as US commander-in-chief. "I will never hesitate to use force to protect the American people or our vital interests, I also promise you this -- and this is very important as we consider our next steps in Afghanistan," Obama told the military personnel. "I will never rush the solemn decision of sending you into harm's way. "I won't risk your lives unless it is absolutely necessary, and if it is necessary, we will back you up. "Because you deserve the strategy, the clear mission, the defined goals and the equipment and support you need to get the job done." Obama critics, some senior Republicans among them, have complained Obama's weeks-long security review is dragging on too long. Former vice president Dick Cheney last week accused the president of "dithering" and "waffling." The president's war council on Monday ran longer than expected, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said, but added there was no change to the expectation that Obama would announce the eagerly awaited decision "in the coming weeks." Obama said last week that he might make up his mind on war commander General Stanley McChrystal's request for 40,000 more troops before the Afghan run-off election on November 7, but might not announce the decision. Political pressure over the increasingly unpopular war is mounting on Obama, following revelations of corruption in the Afghan government, a quickening insurgency and a spike in deaths of US and NATO troops. In his remarks at the naval air station in Jacksonville, Florida, Obama paid tribute to 14 American service personnel killed in two helicopter crashes in Afghanistan, saying they died to thwart Al-Qaeda's hopes of a terror haven. "Our prayers are with these service members, their civilian colleagues and the families who loved them," said Obama. "While no words can ease the ache in their hearts today, may they find some comfort in knowing this: like all those who give their lives in service to America, they were doing their duty and they were doing this nation proud. "They were willing to risk their lives, in this case, to prevent Afghanistan from once again becoming a safe haven for Al-Qaeda and its extremist allies. And today, they gave their lives ... to protect ours." As expectations mounted that Obama is reaching a critical point in his decision making on the war, Senator John Kerry, who played a key role in brokering the run-off election, warned of the risks of McChrystal's request. "He understands the necessity of conducting a smart counterinsurgency in a limited geographic area. But I believe his current plan reaches too far, too fast," said Kerry, who met Obama at the White House last week. "We do not yet have the critical guarantees of governance and of development capacity, the other two legs of counterinsurgency," Kerry told the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington. Obama's war council, part of an exhaustive review of US war strategy in Afghanistan and Pakistan, was scheduled to include Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and Vice President Joe Biden, via video link on Monday. The Washington Post earlier reported that the war review would consider the results of a top secret Pentagon war game on two possible options for future Afghan strategy. The exercise examined the likely outcome of sending 44,000 more troops to conduct a full-scale counterinsurgency effort aimed at building a stable Afghan government that can control most of the country, the report said. But it also examined adding 10,000 to 15,000 more soldiers and Marines as part of an approach dubbed "counterterrorism plus," the paper said. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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Outside View: Afghan armyWashington (UPI) Oct 23, 2009 On May 21, 2002, U.S. Army Gen. Tommy Franks, commander of U.S. Central Command, said to reporters, "I am pleased that our forces have begun training the Afghan National Army." Franks also stated that training the Afghan army will "certainly be one of our more important projects in the days, weeks (and) months ahead, because the national army of Afghanistan is going to be an essential ... read more |
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