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Afghanistan
Europe unlikely to respond fully on Afghan troops
2009-12-01
Bet you were all surprised by this news.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama's European allies are unlikely to send as many troops as he wants to Afghanistan but some analysts say this could rally support at home for his expected pledge to dispatch more U.S. troops.

Obama is widely expected to announce on Tuesday he will send 30,000 more U.S. troops to Afghanistan to help quell violence that has reached its deadliest level since the Taliban's overthrow in 2001. Pentagon officials hope NATO member-states will supplement the buildup with up to 10,000 of their own troops and trainers, to make up the shortfall on the 40,000 additional troops General Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, says are needed to counter the resurgent Taliban.

But NATO diplomats and defense analysts say about half that figure is a more realistic amount to expect from Europe. Britain says it expects NATO allies other than the United States to pledge 5,000 additional troops.

"He (Obama) would prefer they put in more, but one way to argue the case in the United States is to say that once again the Europeans are letting us down and we have to do it ourselves," said Bob Jackson, an analyst at London's Chatham House think tank.

He said this could resonate with the U.S. public, adding: "In the United States, calling for the Europeans to do more and then finding they won't will show that he's a fairly tough minded leader -- it will show he's standing up for something."
Nah, we know better. His dithering the last two months has demonstrated that Bambi too is an invertebrate.
NATO diplomats said the alliance was hoping for more than 5,000 troops from non-U.S. allies, but some diplomats and analysts said the actual number could be even lower as some countries could present troops that deployed for August elections in Afghanistan as reinforcements.

Discussions will take place at a NATO foreign ministers meeting this week and at a military conference next Monday, but some allies are likely to wait for an international conference envisaged in January before making new commitments.

There are about 110,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan, anchored by a 68,000-strong American force. While army chiefs have called for more soldiers, waning public support in Europe and the United States has made meeting such demands difficult. European countries could find themselves under pressure from Obama to commit significantly more resources to the civilian effort, including police training.

NATO Defense College Analyst Christopher Schnaubelt said some EU countries had capabilities, such as in training paramilitary police forces, that the United States did not have. "Hopefully they will be more helpful on the police training. Five thousand soldiers plus a bigger increase in police training forces could have an important and substantive effect," he said.

Tarak Barkawi, a defense expert at Britain's Cambridge University, said continued engagement from Europe was more important to Obama than troop numbers. "In fact small troop contingents from different European countries are often more trouble than they are worth for the Americans. What they are looking for is a sign of commitment from the Europeans," he said.

However, he said it was unrealistic to be expect to train effective defense forces in a relatively short time. "To say a three-, four-, five-year commitment to training troops is going to get you a stable state you can withdraw from doesn't seem to be the case," he said.

He said host countries tended to become dependent on Americans and Europeans to do their training and run their logistics. "It is entirely unclear that tens of thousands of foreign troops are somehow going to produce what centuries of foreign involvement in Afghanistan haven't done up to now," he said.

Jackson said Europe risked losing credibility if it failed to respond in Afghanistan and it would call into question Europe's ambitions become a significant world force. But he dismissed arguments that it could lead to a collapse of NATO as an effective Euro-Atlantic alliance.

"There have been these kinds of crisis ever since NATO started," he said, "but there are fundamental reasons why transatlantic unity will remain in place.

"The Europeans are going to get mocked, yes, but is NATO going to fall apart, no. The U.S. will remain the supreme leader of the Euro-Atlantic alliance, and it's going to prove that Europe can't provide the new world leadership it talks of."
Yup, the Euros make even Bambi look tough.
Posted by:Steve White

#25  "It doesn't make Bambi look tough, just stupid."

Nothing
makes Bambi look stupid rather than tough.

He does that all by himself. :-(
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2009-12-01 21:45  

#24  'Standby'
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-12-01 19:37  

#23  the Euros make even Bambi look tough.

I stand second to no one in willingness to bash the cheese eating surrender monkeys when they fail to man up. But in this case, they are just refusing to get in a fight on the side of a guy who doesn't want to win. It doesn't make Bambi look tough, just stupid.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2009-12-01 19:31  

#22  If we do not intend to win, can anyone explain why the US should stay, either?
Posted by: SR-71   2009-12-01 19:22  

#21  anonymous5089, I've got nuthin' against funny blonde jokes. I even know a few myself. Really. ;)

BTW, thanks for your current analysis of the French military. Had no idea it could be that bad with the supply issue. I thought the big problem was the (possibly) questionable loyalty of Muslim troops in the ranks.
Posted by: Cornsilk Blondie   2009-12-01 19:00  

#20  Quite right RF. We may all soon be looking at France with longing and fond memories. I'm already seeing Carla in that light.
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-12-01 18:54  

#19  Hey, leave the Frogs alone, they got the same gutless politicians you have.
Posted by: Rhodesiafever   2009-12-01 18:24  

#18  I would just like to interrupt the Euro-bashing fest (yes, I do it as well) to say that if you were in their shoes, you would go running, too.
I live in Estonia. For the size of its force, Estonia has lost a larger percentage of its soldiers than any other NATO country.
For what, exactly? The 'value' of its relationship with the United States?
Obama is announcing a troop buildup tonight, and a withdrawal by the elections in 2012. Regardless of the facts on the ground.
So, I read into it that we aren't in it to win, and the death of every soldier from here on out is a waste.
Yeah, the war isn't popular here. But the State Department (like during the Iraq War) has not articulated the case why the fight is necessary.
And the anti-ballistic shield pullout showed how much Obama values its "allies" in Europe.
If I was the prime minister of Estonia, I would pull my troops out. Now.
Posted by: Mizzou Mafia   2009-12-01 17:53  

#17  I guess I should up the ante with WWI (1.4 millions killed, guess they forgot how to avoid to fight), the 1940 debacle (100 000 killed fighting the german army over one month an a half - obviously, even the crap 1940 french army grunts forgot to drop their rifle; incidentally, german losses were 27 000, and the french didn't "surrender", it was an armistice, after being trunced, which amounts to the same, but has a very distinct political & military meaning IIUC).

Well, I wasn't meaning to make this personal (my comments were meant to be my opinion only), but it seems to me you just may have left out a few salient facts concerning the French and their contributions to WWII (and just how many of those 1.4M in WWI are you asking us to believe were wearing a uniform?). I don't have the time or the inclination to fill you in, but hey, I'm told many French think it was the French who liberated them LOL.

Yeah, it's obvious any criticism of the French or anyone else not doing their share in Afghanistan is nothing but ... what? Right-wing rhetoric?

Well, they can stuff their righteous indignation over the deserved criticism of France up their socialist croissants.

Posted by: Woozle Uneter9007   2009-12-01 16:59  

#16  Make sure you do not tempt me to do so, Besoeker dear.
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-12-01 16:51  

#15  ....you do sometimes forget to keep certain opinions to yourself.

Guilty as charged. (so delighted she failed to bring up any of my other numerous shortcomings)
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-12-01 16:03  

#14  I've always thought of you as a darling rather than a sanctimonious prick, a5089, but I'm not an expert on the latter, so I could be wrong.

Besoeker, you do sometimes forget to keep certain opinions to yourself. I never thought of those as sanctimonious, though.
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-12-01 15:51  

#13  Sanctimonious prick?

Thought one of my old colleagues was calling, sorry.
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-12-01 15:24  

#12  Btw, don't want to come out too much as a sanctimonious prick after what had been really some stereotypes-based light humor, with some grounding in Reality (no offense, Woozle, it's just I'm tired of that, and I'm grumpy today), but I figure that if I "correct" people online or not after they tell blonde jokes (hate thoses), I can do the same with different hot buttons.
Posted by: anonymous5089   2009-12-01 15:08  

#11  And, as most know, no one really needs to show the French how to avoid a fight.

Hum, thought I had outgrown those "mine is bigger than yours" silly online episodes (arguing on the internet is like the special olympics..."), but, since I just painted a pretty grim and sadly somewhat objective picture of the french army, just allow me what follows...

(Anyway, my claims to maturity are just absurd, I've never outgrown anything)

French Military History

French victories

I guess I should up the ante with WWI (1.4 millions killed, guess they forgot how to avoid to fight), the 1940 debacle (100 000 killed fighting the german army over one month an a half - obviously, even the crap 1940 french army grunts forgot to drop their rifle; incidentally, german losses were 27 000, and the french didn't "surrender", it was an armistice, after being trunced, which amounts to the same, but has a very distinct political & military meaning IIUC).

Btw, french losses so far in afghanistan are 36, tiny by historical standards and less than Canada or the UK, but, still, quite a few of those fellows forgot how to avoid a fight, most probably.

As for germans & italians, I'll let any concerned party comments, if any.
Posted by: anonymous5089   2009-12-01 14:59  

#10  Crack any 'cheese easting...' joke you want, it's just that. France is still able to do 'police work' in his african backyard, increasingly less so, but, any real force projection is just undoable. On some level, this is not new, IIUC, shirak once actually envisaged sending 10 000 soldiers along for the OIF, and was told by the military brass "don't dream, jacko, we could do this in GWI, there's no way we could ever do it now".
Pacifism may be a good policy, for people who don't have the means to fight back, I guess. And by "good", i mean "the only left".


You are a font of useful information, anonymous5089. I s'pose we should be grateful that should the formal surrender ever come, the enemy won't be getting a usable army along with it.
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-12-01 14:41  

#9  Discussions will take place at a NATO foreign ministers meeting this week

And that's about all they're good for. Face it, if the Germans aren't allowed out after dark and the Italians won't leave the base, they're probably more a hindrance than a help anyway. And, as most know, no one really needs to show the French how to avoid a fight.
Posted by: Woozle Uneter9007   2009-12-01 13:50  

#8  We thought mixing Barry's dreamy chestnut eyes and soothing rhetoric... Posted by: DepotGuy

Tingling up the leg there at ye ole Depot?
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-12-01 12:59  

#7  To cut some slack to sarko (I really despise him, so, bear with me in that rescue effort), who was asked 1500 more tropps and most likely won't send them (or will send less, or in other ways, such as police trainers or things like that)... he just CAN'T send them.

I don't mean he WON'T, I'm saying that everybody is mostly ok to agree that he CAN'T.

The french gvt is broke (not that it prevents it from borrowing yet more money, hiring yet some more civil servants, giving yet some more pay rises to its members, spending yet some more money on festivities, culrtural grants, etc, etc... IE all the expenses that the french banana republic allows itselfs so the people at the top remain rich and spoiled)...

The french army is broke, and it's broken. I don't think you understand the state of dereliction french armed forces are in, the shirak "professionalization" of the army, as his Gaullist Grandeur would have had it, was the final nail. France has no more small arms industry, cannot produce its rifles parts (the Famas was a good design in its time, but has aged badly with zero upgrade, and the 140 000 or so remaining out of the 350 000 produced are literally kept together with duct tape, not to mention the recent fiasco with "barrel upgrade"), small caliber ammo (heck, even the proprietary 5.56 french ammo is now outsourced, and as the latest batches from the UAE have been a disaster, the french army had to fall back on emergency aid from the USA, and going back to... israeli-made ammo. Yes, anti-isreaeli, "Arab Policy" France buy his ammo from Israel, how funny), equipement is crap, soldiers's training is not up to earlier standards, as money is scarce (troops sent to afghanistan had crash ranges time, which proved expensive).

Anyway, the afghan french troops had to have a dire equipement upgrade, just to put them at a reasonable even level with other Nato troops. So far, it's 450 millios euros a year. The french army CANNOT already afford this (overseas operation pays are delayed six month), outfitting 1500 more troops with upgraded equipments, vehicles,... simply isn't doable.

Crack any 'cheese easting...' joke you want, it's just that. France is still able to do 'police work' in his african backyard, increasingly less so, but, any real force projection is just undoable. On some level, this is not new, IIUC, shirak once actually envisaged sending 10 000 soldiers along for the OIF, and was told by the military brass "don't dream, jacko, we could do this in GWI, there's no way we could ever do it now".
Pacifism may be a good policy, for people who don't have the means to fight back, I guess. And by "good", i mean "the only left".
Posted by: anonymous5089   2009-12-01 12:59  

#6  Honestly, why should they add more troops?

The war is very unpopular in Europe.
They don't like Americans.
The US has nothing to bargin/pressure them with.

The US will soon be alone in the 'stan. How long we stay is the question.
Posted by: DarthVader   2009-12-01 12:55  

#5  Â“European countries could find themselves under pressure from Obama to commit significantly more resources to the civilian effort, including police training.”

Hey…where’s that foreign policy nuance we were promised? No one is all that surprised that the bad guys mock you for your limp-power strategies. But were talking ‘bout the Euros here. We thought mixing Barry’s dreamy chestnut eyes and soothing rhetoric with Hillary’s furrowed brow and maniacal laugh was supposed to bowl them over. C’mon man!
Posted by: DepotGuy   2009-12-01 10:27  

#4  Luv that graphic.
Posted by: Scooter McGruder   2009-12-01 06:40  

#3  There are about 110,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan, anchored by a 68,000-strong American force.

Please add to that figure another 60,000+ US contractors.
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-12-01 06:24  

#2  "'There have been these kinds of crisis ever since NATO started,' he said, 'but there are fundamental reasons why transatlantic unity will remain in place.'"
Oh, really?
The transatlantic alliance has withstood Europe stabbing America in the back, but will it survive America betraying Europe?
Europeans wanted Obama, now they got Obama.
Posted by: Sheba Glomoth3252   2009-12-01 02:35  

#1  Tell the Euro-zone no need to rush it anymore, as per

PAKISTAN TRIBUNE >[Obama Strategy = USA] "WE WILL BE OUT OF AFGHANISTAN BY 2017".
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-12-01 01:05  

00:00