NATO chief says more troops needed in Afghanistan

  • 12/15/2022
  • 20:28
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LONDON, Oct 19, SPA -- NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said Thursday that additional NATO forces are needed in Afghanistan from member states, and that the NATO mission will only succeed if it can help the Afghan government improve ordinary people's lives. De Hoop Scheffer was asked on BBC radio about a suicide bomb attack on a vehicle of a British aid group in southern Afghanistan on Thursday that reportedly killed one civilian and wounded four. «It does bring home that the Taliban and the otherspoilers of the process of nation-building and democracy in Afghanistan are having to go with these kinds of horribletactics _ improvised explosive devices, suicide bombers and so on _ because they know they can't beat NATO in other ways,» he said. «I can assure you they will not beat NATO, neither theU.K. nor other forces, by employing these tactics.» DeHoop Scheffer played down the recent prediction by Lt. Gen. David Richards, the British commander of NATO's forces in Afghanistan, that this winter could see a «tipping point» with local people switching their allegiance to theTaliban. «I think that we should be a bit careful to imposedeadlines on ourselves,» the NATO chief said. «But Iagree with Gen. Richards that it is of great importance towin the battle for hearts and minds. He is right when hesays that a number of people in Afghanistan are sitting onthe fence and looking how things will further develop.» De Hoop Scheffer said NATO must help the Afghan government deliver improvements to ordinary people's lives, including jobs, infrastructure and alternative livelihoods for poppy farmers. «If people think that there is a military solution, theyare wrong,» he said. De Hoop Scheffer was making a speech in London laterThursday about the situation in Afghanistan amid continuing NATO appeals for additional troops from member states. He welcomed recent pledges of troops from Poland, theCzech Republic, Romania, Denmark and Canada. But heacknowledged that there was «competition for forces»because of multinational deployments in Iraq, Congo andLebanon. «I am not completely satisfied, because we always can do better if we have more forces, but since the call went out ... we have seen a lot of nations stepping up to the plate. We are not entirely there yet,» the NATO chief said. «If we fail, then Afghanistan will come to us. It will be abreeding ground for terrorists again.--SPA www.spa.gov.sa/397039

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