Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Obama answers troop question, but prompts others
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
More Yahoo! Services
Account Options
New User? Sign Up
Sign In
Help
Yahoo! Search
web search
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Australia
China
India
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia
Philippines
Thailand
Vietnam
Obama answers troop question, but prompts others
By HEIDI VOGT and DENIS GRAY,Associated Press Writers -
Thursday, December 3
Send
IM Story
Print
KABUL – The much-anticipated new U.S. war strategy finally in hand, Afghans and U.S. troops on the ground began asking key questions Wednesday on the fate of the violence-battered nation: Can the Afghan government fight corruption and ready its forces to secure the nation? Can U.S. troops really start going home in July 2011? Will more troops mean more Afghans dying?
The Afghan government welcomed President Barack Obama's announcement that he was sending 30,000 more U.S. troops, but cautioned against setting a deadline for Americans to hand over to Afghan security forces and start withdrawing. Obama said if conditions are right, U.S. troops could begin leaving Afghanistan in 18 months.
U.S. service members deployed near Kabul were happy with the withdrawal plan but wondered if the boost in American troop numbers could turn the war around. While some Afghan civilians also welcomed the troop surge, they doubted the Taliban could be beaten.
"I am asking America `What did you do for the last eight years against your enemies? You have killed Afghans and your enemies have killed Afghans. It seems you are weak and the enemy is strong. Will you defeat the enemy this time?" said Haji Anwar Khan, a white-bearded resident of Kandahar in Afghanistan's violent south.
In neighboring Pakistan, Obama's speech drew a lukewarm reaction. Key al-Qaida leaders including Osama bin Laden are believed to have taken refuge in Pakistan, and Obama's announcement of a tentative date to begin withdrawing U.S. troops could deter Pakistan from cracking down on Taliban fighters using Pakistani territory as a safe haven.
"The Americans would like to keep the pressure on the Pakistan army to chase the militants all over the tribal regions, but Pakistan of course has to see whether it's feasible," said Dr. Riffat Hussain, a professor of Defense Studies at Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad. "It seems Pakistan prefers the incremental approach."
U.S. service members in Wardak province, 22 miles (35 kilometers) west of Kabul, learned of Obama's troop build-up as they watched TV clips of the speech during their breakfast of sausage, eggs, hash browns, fruit and cereal at Forward Operating Base Airborne.
"Really, I'm truly happy," said Air Force Tech. Sgt. Phillip M. Hauser, an explosive demolition expert from Salina, Kansas, on his fourth tour of Afghanistan and Iraq. "As soon as the Afghans can do it on their own without our help, we can go home."
Asked if the Afghan security forces were ready, Hauser noted their inexperience, but didn't question their determination.
"They charge in and start pulling the wires" on the explosives, Hauser said. "It's not the safest way to do things, but these guys have the guts."
Sgt. Maj. Andrew Spano of Northboro, Massachusetts, deployed with the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment, 10th Mountain Division, wondered whether to bank on the beginnings of a U.S. pullout in 18 months.
"What does that really mean?" he asked.
More than 850 members of the U.S. military have died in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Uzbekistan as a result of the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, according to the Defense Department. Of those, the military reports nearly 660 were killed by hostile action. NATO reported that the latest member of the U.S. forces to die was killed in eastern Afghanistan on Tuesday when his patrol was attacked by insurgents.
Capt. Mark Reel from Norfolk, Virginia, a civil affairs officer, said more troops mean nothing unless they can give local Afghans a sense of perceived security.
"They have to believe they are more secure. You get thousands of troops on some of these bases here, but what are they really doing? The troops just have to get out there (in the field)." The reason the surge worked in Iraq, he said, is because troops were able to get into the field and make Iraqis feel safer, he said.
Davood Moradian, senior adviser to the Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, welcomed Obama's statement but cautioned against comparing the two wars.
"We are very pleased and support President Obama's analysis that Afghanistan is not Vietnam. But I think Afghanistan is not Iraq. Therefore, we have to be very careful about that," he said.
Moradian was still reviewing the speech, but said his impression was that the plan to start pulling U.S. troops out of Afghanistan in July 2011 was not a hard deadline. "It has to be a results-oriented mission here," he said. "If we try to pursue a strategy based on an artificial deadline, I don't think that is going to work."
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, said NATO and U.S. forces would hand over responsibility for securing the country to the Afghan security forces "as rapidly as conditions allow." Both he and Obama cautioned that success in Afghanistan would also depend on improvements in governance and economic development aid.
McChrystal met Wednesday with Afghan President Hamid Karzai for nearly one hour at the presidential palace and described the leader's reaction as "really positive."
"The president was very upbeat, very resolute this morning," he said. "I really believe that everybody's got a focus now that's sharper than it was 24 hours ago."
Interior Minister Hanif Atmar, who also met with McChrystal, lauded Obama's speech, yet sought details about how the Afghan security forces would be trained and expanded in the next 18 months _ a time frame that he said was too short for a complete handoff from international forces.
"That kind of time frame will give us momentum," Atmar said. "We are hoping that there will be clarity in terms of long-term growth needs of the Afghan national security forces and what can be achieved in 18 months."
Ghulam Haider Hamidi, the mayor of Kandahar in southern Afghanistan where a large chunk of the new U.S. forces will be deployed, cited corruption _ which Karzai has pledged to fight _ as the worst problem facing his nation.
"The biggest problem is corruption in the Afghan government, police and military but also in some of the companies coming from the United States, Canada and England and Germany," Hamidi said. "There is corruption and drug dealing by the people who are in power, within the police and the military."
Hamidi said just last month he was told that Taliban were sleeping in the police barracks.
"The police are taking money from both sides _ the government and the Taliban," he said. "When we have this kind of police and military, the Afghan problem won't be solved in 20 years."
He also said that safe havens next door in Pakistan have to be shut down if Afghanistan's insurgency is to be curbed. On Wednesday, a suicide attacker struck Pakistan's naval headquarters in Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan, which has been hit with a series of bombings in recent months by Islamist militants.
"More American troops will mean more violence," said Pakistani engineering student Ammar Ahmed, 20. "It will worsen the situation both in Afghanistan and Pakistan."
___
Associated Press Writers Deb Riechmann, Sebastian Abbott and Rahim Faiez in Kabul, Chris Brummitt in Islamabad, Darlene Superville and Steven Hurst in West Point, N.Y. contributed to this report.
Recommend
Send
IM Story
Print
Related Articles
Suicide bomber kills 1 at navy complex in Pakistan AP - 1 hour 11 minutes ago
EU to give more funding to Khmer Rouge tribunal AP - 1 hour 15 minutes ago
World Bank to loan India $1 billion to clean up Ganges Reuters - 1 hour 50 minutes ago
Australia's carbon-trading legislation fails AP - 2 hours 39 minutes ago
No Australia poll in wake of climate law defeat AFP - 2 hours 41 minutes ago
News Search
Top Stories
EU agrees pan-European financial oversight deal
US private sector sheds more jobs than expected
Three out of 10 Christmas lights unsafe: EU
Trade ministers disagree on WTO Doha talks
Dubai and Abu Dhabi markets plunge on debt woes
More Top Stories »
ADVERTISEMENT
Most Popular
Most Viewed
Most Recommended
Dubai and Abu Dhabi markets plunge on debt woes
WHO changes HIV treatment advice
Dubai World to restructure parts of group including Nakheel
Trade ministers disagree on WTO Doha talks
Early intervention aids children with autism: study
More Most Viewed »
Global stocks mixed amid Dubai debt crisis
Tiny magnetic discs could kill cancer cells: study
Mankind using Earth's resources at alarming rate
Alcohol helps cut heart disease risk for men: study
Dubai blackout over debt plans to hit Gulf markets
More Most Recommended »
Elsewhere on Yahoo!
Financial news on Yahoo! Finance
Stars and latest movies
Best travel destinations
More on Yahoo! News
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Subscribe to our news feeds
Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS
» More news feeds | What are news feeds?
Also on Yahoo
Answers
Groups
Mail
Messenger
Mobile
Travel
Finance
Movies
Sports
Games
» All Yahoo! Services
Site Highlights
Singapore
Full Coverage
Most Popular
Asia Entertainment
Photos
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Service |
Privacy Policy |
Community |
Intellectual Property Rights Policy |
Help
Other News on Wednesday, 2 December 2009 Russia shifts stance on Iran, Ahmadinejad defiant
| International
|
Five Britons held in Iran after yacht seized in Gulf
Two freed from Guantanamo, sent to France, Hungary
| International
|
Rwanda banker gets 30-year sentence for war crimes
| International
|
Kosovo tells world court independence irreversible
| International
|
Russia sheds light on murder that sparked purges
| International
|
Microsoft, News Corp reports overplayed: source
| Technology
|
Movement under way in California to ban divorce
Northrop links to academics to boost cyber defense
| Technology
|
Sirius XM CEO says holiday sales on target
| Technology
|
Film said to show Marilyn Monroe smoking pot
| Entertainment
|
Precious and Last Station top indie Spirit film nods
| Entertainment
|
Michael Jackson bumps Britney Spears from top Yahoo '09 searches
| Entertainment
|
Reality show wannabes deny crashing White House dinner
| Entertainment
|
Charlize Theron to co-host World Cup soccer draw
| Entertainment
|
Several Broadway musicals break box-office records
Islamists claim responsibility for Russian rail bomb
| International
|
Thais pray for hospitalized king as birthday nears
| International
|
Drug hitmen in suits kill key witness in Mexico
| International
|
Iran releases five Britons detained from yacht: radio
| International
|
Afghans unimpressed by Obama's troops surge
| International
|
Fellow Iraqi turns tables on Bush shoe-thrower
| International
|
Microsoft denies black screen of death issues
| Technology
|
Hackers spread virus with swine flu vaccine offer
| Technology
|
Diamond Pet Foods Recalls Select Cat Foods Over Thiamine Deficiency Fears
Update: President Obama Increases Troop Levels; Discusses Clear-Cut Future Withdrawal Time Frame
Number Of Kids With Down Syndrome Rises In U.S.
Obama To Announce Afghan Strategy In Primetime Address From West Point
Texas Inmate Escapes Custody During Transfer
Connecticut Sues CVS Drug Store For Selling Expired Products, Medications
Social Networking Sites Facebook, MySpace Boot Off 3,500 + Sex Offenders
U.S. Bank Report: Investors Should Focus On Israel Until Dubai Crisis Fades
Disgraced Florida Attorney Pleads Not Guilty In Ponzi Scheme Charges
Abducted Boy Returning Home Safely
Simon Cowell gambling on Internet Vegas talent show
| Entertainment
|
Lady Gaga finds a new fan in Barry Manilow
| Entertainment
|
Nick Jonas announces solo tour for January
| Entertainment
|
CBS wins November TV sweeps; Fox scores big gains
| Entertainment
|
Fiddler director Jewison honored with career award
| Entertainment
|
Regis Philbin's hip surgery a success
| Entertainment
|
Regal cinema group sees Avatar making over $250 million
| Entertainment
|
Iran sends analyst, opposition supporter to prison
Iran president says will produce 20 percent fuel
| International
|
Google offers publishers limit on free news access
Bomb kills one outside Pakistan naval headquarters
| International
|
US sending 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan
Iran frees five British sailors
Iran editor gets 9-year jail term for vote protest
| International
|
Israel cut settlement spending in 2009
| International
|
US allies to send 5,000 troops to Afghanistan: NATO
Philippines pulls out 1,000 police in massacre area
| International
|
Saudis flee border fighting with Yemen rebels
| International
|
Berlusconi camp tells critical ally to get in line
| International
|
Yahoo expands integration with Facebook
| Technology
|
Manhunt ends with cops slayings' suspect's death
Google offers publishers limit on free news access
| Technology
|
Obama answers troop question, but prompts others
Avoid flirty patients on Facebook, doctors told
| Technology
|
Nokia sees cellphone market up 10 percent in 2010
| Technology
|
Dubai debt questions unanswered, UAE takes new break
Trade ministers wrap up inconclusive talks on Doha
I've let my family down, says Tiger Woods
| Entertainment
|
Indonesia bans war crimes film Balibo
| Entertainment
|
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights