5,000 more European troops expected
KABUL: Europe may send 5,000 more soldiers to Afghanistan, Brita-in’s prime minister said - affirming support for the NATO mission as the Obama administration nears a decision on increasing US troop levels.
The announcement on Friday came as the Taliban struck again in the capital. A suicide car bomber blasted a US convoy near an American military base in Kabul, injuring nine American soldiers and 10 contract security guards. Three Afghans were killed in the attack - the biggest in Kabul in the last two weeks.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown said the NATO strategy must be to encourage a greater role for Afghan forces so that international troops “can start coming home.” His remarks were made a day after he met NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen. The NATO chief said other allied nations have privately pledged more help, but Rasmussen stopped short of saying that countries would send more troops.
“We need our other NATO allies to help,” Brown told the BBC in a London interview.
He said he had been contacting governments both inside and outside the 45-member NATO-led coalition, asking them to send more soldiers to train and mentor Afghan forces so they can take responsibility for security in their own country. He estimated as many as 5,000 troops could be raised from that effort.