Officials Reaffirm Commitment to Afghan Strategy

WASHINGTON, Feb. 27, 2012 — The riot­ing and killings that have fol­lowed the acci­den­tal burn­ing of Qurans by coali­tion per­son­nel will not change the NATO strat­e­gy in Afghanistan, Pen­ta­gon Press Sec­re­tary George Lit­tle said today.

Defense Sec­re­tary Leon E. Panet­ta and Army Gen. Mar­tin E. Dempsey, chair­man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are ful­ly com­mit­ted to con­tin­u­ing oper­a­tions aimed at turn­ing over secu­ri­ty respon­si­bil­i­ty to Afghan forces by the end of 2014, Lit­tle said. 

Panet­ta and Dempsey “believe we have achieved sig­nif­i­cant progress in revers­ing the Taliban’s momen­tum and in devel­op­ing the Afghan secu­ri­ty forces, and they believe that the fun­da­men­tals of our strat­e­gy remain sound,” Lit­tle said in a Pen­ta­gon news con­fer­ence, joined by Pen­ta­gon spokesman Navy Capt. John Kir­by, who spoke to the Pen­ta­gon press corps from the Afghan cap­i­tal of Kabul. 

Afghans riot­ed fol­low­ing the rev­e­la­tion that NATO forces inad­ver­tent­ly burned Islam­ic reli­gious arti­cles, includ­ing Qurans. Four Amer­i­cans have been killed, includ­ing two offi­cers serv­ing as advi­sors in the Afghan inte­ri­or min­istry in Kabul. 

It is impor­tant that the recent events not blind peo­ple to the progress being made in the coun­try, Lit­tle said. The NATO-led Inter­na­tion­al Secu­ri­ty Assis­tance Force, in part­ner­ship with Afghan nation­al secu­ri­ty forces, is mak­ing progress in defeat­ing al-Qai­da and its ter­ror­ist allies and deny­ing them the abil­i­ty to main­tain a safe haven in Afghanistan, he added. 

Afghan riot­ing is decreas­ing, with only three demon­stra­tions held today, Kir­by said, not­ing that ISAF lead­ers have joined with Afghan Pres­i­dent Hamid Karzai in urg­ing calm and an end to vio­lent protests. 

“We appre­ci­ate the steps Pres­i­dent Karzai is tak­ing to quell vio­lence in the coun­try, and we com­mend the hard work and sac­ri­fice of the Afghan secu­ri­ty forces who have suf­fered casu­al­ties attempt­ing to quell the vio­lence,” Lit­tle said. “We respect the right of all Afghans to peace­ful protest, but fur­ther blood­shed serves nei­ther the coali­tion nor the Afghan peo­ple, who are them­selves falling vic­tim to violence.” 

Lit­tle said the rela­tion­ship between ISAF forces and their Afghan part­ners remains strong, point­ing out that U.S. forces work with 330,000 Afghan secu­ri­ty forces to defend the coun­try. “Togeth­er, they fight in very dif­fi­cult sit­u­a­tions, build­ing trust and mutu­al respect despite recent inci­dents,” the press sec­re­tary said. 

The spir­it of Amer­i­can, coali­tion and Afghan forces will be test­ed through­out the cam­paign in Afghanistan, Lit­tle said. “Any­one who believes they can weak­en our resolve through these cow­ard­ly attacks is severe­ly mis­tak­en,” he added. 

The coali­tion will emerge from the chal­lenges stronger and more uni­fied, Lit­tle said. “There is much at stake in Afghanistan, and our com­mit­ment to our mis­sion and our strat­e­gy will not waver,” he said. 

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

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 →