Friday, June 13, 2008

Larger Force in Afghanistan May Be 'Counterintuitive' U.S. General Says

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, June 13, 2008 -- The current number of forces in Afghanistan is enough to accomplish the mission, but it’ll take awhile to do so, the U.S. officer who just finished his tour as commander of NATO troops in Afghanistan said here today.

“Let’s just say that somebody waved a magic wand, and by gosh, between the Afghans and the international force you’d produced a force that was well over 400,000,” Army Gen. Dan K. McNeill said to reporters at a Pentagon news conference.

That larger force, McNeill said, likely would produce “instant quiet” across much of Afghanistan.

Yet, “in some areas you’d see a different kind of friction arising,” McNeill predicted, as the Afghans probably would become incensed at having so many foreign troops in their land.

“So, probably, to get that many [troops] in there would be somewhat counterintuitive,” the four-star general said.

McNeill, who recently wrapped up a 16-month duty tour in Afghanistan as commander of NATO’s International Security Assistance Force, shared his experiences and thoughts about his prior command. He is preparing to retire from the Army after a 40-year career. Army Gen. David D. McKiernan assumed command of NATO’s ISAF from McNeill.

The number 400,000 was obtained through a mathematical formula derived from U.S. counterinsurgency doctrine that factors in a country’s landmass and population, McNeill explained. That force, he noted, would include diplomatic and reconstruction specialists, as well as U.S., NATO and Afghan security forces.

The aim of a counterinsurgency operation, McNeill pointed out, is to defeat the enemy’s strategy by separating the people from the insurgents.

“You need reconstruction, you need the right kind of governance,” in addition to security forces during counterinsurgency operations, McNeill pointed out.

Everyone acknowledges that anti-insurgent forces in Afghanistan are under-resourced, McNeill said. And there’s little chance, he noted, that those forces would be greatly increased.

“The answer is, we’ve got the get the Afghans enabled” to conduct their own security, McNeill said.

It’s important, McNeill said, to contemplate the state of the wills of the U.S. and European governments, as well as the Afghan people, to see the fight against insurgents in Afghanistan through to the end.

However, if there are going to be terrorist sanctuaries just out of reach of NATO or Afghan forces, McNeill said, then it doesn’t matter how many terrorists are destroyed in Afghanistan.

“And, so it seems to me, at some juncture, the Afghans have to take on the responsibility for security of their own battle space,” McNeill said. The Afghans, he noted, “are well on their way to doing that.”

It’ll take a few years for the Afghans to be ready to provide for their own security, McNeill predicted, noting Afghan forces will start taking over some of the battle space in their country around August.

The United States, its NATO allies and the Afghans accomplish the job with an under-resourced force structure, McNeill told reporters.

“It will simply take longer,” he explained. “If you want a faster rate of progress, you need a more capable force. If you’re not willing to make the force more capable, then you have to accept the pace that you presently have, which by some people’s reckoning is somewhat slow.”

(Story by Gerry J. Gilmore, American Forces Press Service.)

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