Afghan withdrawal date ‘emboldens’ Taliban
September 4th, 2010 - 3:17 pm ICT by IANS
London, Sep 4 (IANS) A report, endorsed by an American defence expert and retired general, has claimed that the US and Britain’s decision to set a troops withdrawal date for Afghanistan “emboldens” the Taliban to fight on.
Gen Jack Keane, who was one of the prime movers behind the Iraq surge of 2007, has backed a foreign policy think tank paper that warns talk of Western retreat from the country only “emboldens Afghan insurgents”, the Daily Telegraph reported Friday.
The report attacked the political rhetoric of timelines for withdrawal which played into the hands of the Taliban and undermined the NATO military effort.
“It emboldens insurgents to continue fighting, as they are presented with a survival target to reach,” wrote the report’s author George Grant, a counter-terrorism expert. Early withdrawal would be a “tremendous betrayal” of Afghan people.
The report, published by the Britain-based Henry Jackson Society, cautions that Afghan people are now frightened of supporting the Kabul government as they would be labelled collaborators once Western forces leave.
“The setting of arbitrary and concrete withdrawal dates will convince the Afghan people that to support the government-side now will invite retribution at the hands of the Taliban after Coalition forces withdraw.”
Gen Keane, a close fried of Gen David Petraeus, the new US commander in Afghanistan, said the report was “unique and invaluable”.
The paper, which comes just days before a significant parliamentary debate on the war, added: “The worst option that the governments of Coalition forces could take is to pledge an unconditional withdrawal from Afghanistan without understanding that the current strategy is both viable and necessary.
British Prime Minister David Cameron’s pledge to remove British forces before 2015 has already been criticised by Gen Sir Mike Jackson, former chief of the General Staff, who said it would mean the campaign could be “hostage to fortune in being too pedantic about the date”.
There is also growing concern over US President Barack Obama’s insistence that troops should begin withdrawing by July next year.
The paper said talk of deadlines created “the very real danger of generating precisely the climate of fear and uncertainty amongst ordinary Afghans.”
The report also criticised the early conduct of the campaign which focused “on the elimination of insurgents” without given attention to what caused the insurgency.
Without the support of the Afghan people it could never be won that’s why the current counter-insurgency strategy of providing security for population centres needed to be given time to work.
The paper, entitled Succeeding in Afghanistan, urges political and military leaders to commit to the “long haul” and cease talk of withdrawal dates.
“Defeat in Afghanistan is not inevitable” it concluded. “On the contrary, if the United Kingdom, the United States and others retain their commitment to Afghanistan, and continue to pursue the counterinsurgency approach being applied at present, then success will not be such a distant prospect as so many seem to think.”
- US general backs report saying Afghan withdrawal date 'emboldens' Taliban - Sep 04, 2010
- Afghanistan seeks Indian equipment for security forces (Roundup) - May 01, 2012
- Afghanistan seeks Indian equipment for security forces (Lead) - May 01, 2012
- 'Winning' Taliban 'contemptuously' rule out negotiations with NATO - Jul 01, 2010
- Biden says US troops could stay in Afghanistan beyond 2014 if asked - Jan 12, 2011
- US seeks to slow down military withdrawal from Afghanistan - Aug 12, 2010
- Petraeus vows to keep Afghan civilian deaths down - Jul 01, 2010
- US official feels substantial progress has been made in Afghanistan - Oct 29, 2010
- Afghan War: Pentagon hopes to shift from counter-insurgency to counter-terrorism - Dec 17, 2010
- Defiant US interacting with Taliban leaders without ISI consent - Oct 20, 2010
- Eight Taliban killed in Afghanistan - May 06, 2012
- Karzai urges US to reduce special 'night raid' operations in Afghanistan - Nov 15, 2010
- Afghanistan seeks early security handover: Karzai - Mar 16, 2012
- 'Taliban cannot be defeated militarily' - Oct 17, 2010
- Seven militants killed in Afghanstan - Mar 18, 2012
Tags: american defence, british prime minister, counter terrorism, daily telegraph, david cameron, david petraeus, gen david petraeus, george grant, government side, henry jackson, military effort, parliamentary debate, political rhetoric, prime movers, target, terrorism expert, unconditional withdrawal, us commander, western retreat, withdrawal dates