Review Validates Efforts in Afghanistan, Mullen Says

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, Dec. 16, 2010 — The Afghanistan-Pak­istan review Pres­i­dent Barack Oba­ma announced today val­i­dates what ser­vice­mem­bers have been doing through­out the the­ater, the chair­man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said here today.

The review looked at the Afghanistan-Pak­istan strat­e­gy that Oba­ma put in place last year and reaf­firmed the goal announced last year to dis­rupt, dis­man­tle and defeat al-Qai­da. It also makes clear that the Unit­ed States has a long-term strate­gic com­mit­ment to Afghanistan and Pak­istan to ensure that al-Qai­da and affil­i­at­ed groups do not return to the area to plan more attacks like the ones on Sept. 11, 2001, that killed 3,000 Americans. 

The chair­man called the review a “very impor­tant check” on the strategy. 

Mullen is in Afghanistan meet­ing with Amer­i­can, NATO and Afghan offi­cials. He came to the coun­try from Pak­istan, where he con­sult­ed with mil­i­tary and civil­ian leaders. 

In Afghanistan, the chair­man met with Marines and sailors at Camp Hansen –- out­side the city of Mar­ja –- and sol­diers and civil­ians at For­ward Oper­at­ing Base Wil­son in west­ern Kan­da­har. Yes­ter­day, he vis­it­ed troops in Region­al Com­mand East at Bagram Air­field near the Afghan cap­i­tal of Kab­ul. In all areas, he received can­did appraisals of the sit­u­a­tion, how the units are imple­ment­ing the strat­e­gy and what com­man­ders and ser­vice­mem­bers see on the front lines. 

The review found that progress has been made in Afghanistan and that the Tal­iban and al-Qai­da momen­tum in the coun­try has been arrest­ed and, in some key areas, reversed. 

The review does not call for ser­vice­mem­bers to change what they are doing. Rather, “it val­i­dates what they are doing, and what they should be focused on,” the chair­man said dur­ing an inter­view with reporters trav­el­ing with him. 

“As we start to make sig­nif­i­cant progress in the secu­ri­ty area,” Mullen said, “they will look to what they’ve achieved” as val­i­da­tion of the strat­e­gy and their efforts. 

On this trip and in pre­vi­ous trav­els through the region, the chair­man has stressed that the July 2011 date announced in the Afghanistan-Pak­istan strat­e­gy is not an end date for U.S. involve­ment in Afghanistan. Rather, he said, it’s when the secu­ri­ty tran­si­tion to Afghan lead will begin. Amer­i­can troops will con­tin­ue to be in Afghanistan after July 2011, the chair­man said. 

Mullen dis­cussed the process behind the review and how it dif­fers from a sim­i­lar effort last year. 

“This year, it was a dif­fer­ent focus,” he said. “Last year it was, ‘What’s the strat­e­gy, and how do we resource it?’ This year, it was the diag­nos­tic on the strat­e­gy, [ask­ing] ‘How are we doing?’ ” 

Mullen added that the ser­vice­mem­bers who must imple­ment the strat­e­gy are a year into the process now, and they under­stand much bet­ter what they need to do. 

Both review process­es fea­tured healthy debate, the chair­man said. It has helped, he added, that the strat­e­gy is show­ing results, much of it as the review neared its end. 

“We also start­ed to see — right through the end of the review [in] Sep­tem­ber, Octo­ber, Novem­ber -– we’ve seen secu­ri­ty progress which has opened up the door for oth­er things,” Mullen said. 

Source:
U.S. Depart­ment of Defense
Office of the Assis­tant Sec­re­tary of Defense (Pub­lic Affairs) 

Face­book and/or on Twit­ter

Team GlobDef

Seit 2001 ist GlobalDefence.net im Internet unterwegs, um mit eigenen Analysen, interessanten Kooperationen und umfassenden Informationen für einen spannenden Überblick der Weltlage zu sorgen. GlobalDefence.net war dabei die erste deutschsprachige Internetseite, die mit dem Schwerpunkt Sicherheitspolitik außerhalb von Hochschulen oder Instituten aufgetreten ist.

Alle Beiträge ansehen von Team GlobDef →