Bank Of Baku

New British leader shows support for war effort in trip to Afghanistan

New British leader shows support for war effort in trip to Afghanistan
# 10 June 2010 22:19 (UTC +04:00)
Baku-APA. British Prime Minister David Cameron on Thursday made his first visit to Afghanistan since taking office, saying the war there was his top foreign-policy priority but that British troops should not stay "a day longer than is necessary", APA reports quoting Los Angeles Times.

Cameron’s unannounced trip came a day after U.S. Gen. David Petraeus declared that defeating the Taliban could not be accomplished without Britain’s participation. Both Petraeus and U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates were in London this week to shore up Britain’s commitment to the war in the face of ongoing public opposition and the new government’s vow to cut spending.

Standing alongside Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Cameron said securing Afghanistan remained uppermost on his foreign-policy agenda but warned that this was "the vital year."
"This is the year when we have to make progress, progress for the sake of the Afghan people but progress also on behalf of people back at home who want this to work," Cameron said. "Obviously, no one wants British troops to stay in Afghanistan for a day longer than is necessary."

He ruled out any troop increases as "not remotely on the U.K. agenda." After the U.S., the British have the second-largest deployment in Afghanistan, consisting of about 10,000 troops.

But as soldiers continue to come home in coffins, many here are questioning Britain’s involvement and demanding withdrawal as quickly as possible. More than 290 British troops have been killed in Afghanistan since U.S.-led forces invaded in 2001, following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the U.S., according to icasualties.org, a website that tracks U.S. and NATO military deaths in Afghanistan.

Mindful of the stirrings at home, Cameron promised to give regular updates on the war. He pledged an extra $98 million on personnel and equipment to counter the threat posed by roadside bombs, which have been responsible for many of the deaths of British troops.

He also said Britain would fulfill its promise of nearly $300 million to help Afghanistan build institutions such as its national police so that foreign forces could "hand power over to an Afghanistan that is able to take control of its own security."

Cameron stressed the need for a "proper political surge" alongside the recent military surge, mostly of American troops, to hasten some sort of political settlement between the Afghan government and the insurgency.

With the backing of a national peace conference last week, Karzai’s administration is hoping to persuade rank-and-file fighters to lay down their weapons and to talk to Taliban leaders.
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