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More U.S. troops needed for Afghan war: Mullen
Tue Sep 15, 2009 9:29pm EDT
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By Andrew Gray
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Even more U.S. troops will likely be needed in Afghanistan beyond the 68,000 who will have deployed there by the end of this year, the top U.S. military officer said on Tuesday.
Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, did not estimate how many more troops would be needed but said he expected a request for more resources from the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan in a couple of weeks.
Mullen said he felt a sense of urgency about the war but also pleaded for patience as skepticism about it grows among members of Congress, especially in President Barack Obama's Democratic Party, and the American public.
"A properly resourced counterinsurgency probably means more forces," Mullen told the U.S. Senate's armed services committee.
"We can get there. We can accomplish the mission we've been assigned," he said.
"But we will need resources matched to the strategy, civilian expertise matched to military capabilities, and the continued support of the American people."
Obama is considering a formal assessment of the war from Army General Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, whose report is expected to result in a request by the military for more combat forces. Members of the Senate will be briefed on Wednesday on McChrystal's report, a congressional aide said.
In Kabul, the head of a U.N.-backed watchdog that monitored last month's Afghan elections said on Tuesday a partial recount ordered to prevent voter fraud will cover more than 10 percent of polling stations.
That means that enough votes are likely to be subjected to the fraud investigation to potentially alter the outcome, prolonging uncertainty over the result for weeks or months.
The preliminary results give President Hamid Karzai a majority of 54.3 percent, but the U.N. watchdog has already annulled votes from dozens of polling stations and can discard even more.
GROWING AMERICAN DISAPPROVAL
Fifty-eight percent of Americans now oppose the Afghan war while 39 percent support it, according to a CNN/Opinion Research poll released on Monday.
Obama himself acknowledged that continued public support for the mission was important but rejected comparisons between Afghanistan and the deeply divisive Vietnam War.
"Afghanistan is not Vietnam," he said in an interview with CNBC television and the New York Times published on Tuesday.
"But the dangers of overreach and not having clear goals and not having strong support from the American people, those are all issues that I think about all the time," Obama said. Continued...
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