Articles found May 28, 2010
Liam Fox flies to Afghanistan seeking to speed up troop withdrawal
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May 22, 2010
The Government hopes to speed up withdrawal of thousands of British troops from Afghanistan and has ruled out any move from Helmand province to neighbouring Kandahar.
In a significant shift from Labour’s foreign policy, Liam Fox, the Defence Secretary, said that Britain was not a “global policeman” and emphasised that the mission in Afghanistan was about making British streets safer rather than sending Afghan girls to school.
His comments, in an interview with The Times, came as the Ministry of Defence announced yesterday that 8,000 British troops in southern Afghanistan would come under the control of the US, a change that underlines Britain’s diminished role in the region.
Dr Fox, who is due to visit Afghanistan this weekend, plans to use the trip to explore ways to accelerate the departure of some 10,000 British troops. “We need to accept we are at the limit of numbers now and I would like the forces to come back as soon as possible,” he said.
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Hold ground, then push forward, Canadian commander declares
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By Matthew Fisher, Canwest News Service May 27, 2010
As "tantalizing" as it is "to close with the enemy and kill them," Canada's new battle group commander says his troops must first consolidate gains in eastern Panjwaii, an area that was seized from the Taliban a few months ago and long dubbed 'the Wild West' by NATO forces.
"That is the easy part," Lt.-Col. Conrad Mialkowski said when asked if his soldiers intended to hunt down the Taliban in their western sanctuaries. "The hard part is to live among the people and have a positive impact on their lives.
"Before we go west, the Canadians, Americans and Afghans must hold what we have, and, if we are to go west, we must do it with the Afghan army and Afghan police. The days are gone when we would sally forth on our own."
The priority of British Maj.-Gen. Nick Carter, the International Security Assistance Force's commander in southern Afghanistan, has been to firm up "a ring of stability" around Kandahar City, which the alliance and the Taliban have both declared is the vital, possibly decisive ground in their long war. Achieving stability to the immediate southwest of the provincial capital has fallen to Mialkowski's Petawawa-based 1st Battalion, the Royal Canadian Regiment.
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Liam Fox flies to Afghanistan seeking to speed up troop withdrawal
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May 22, 2010
The Government hopes to speed up withdrawal of thousands of British troops from Afghanistan and has ruled out any move from Helmand province to neighbouring Kandahar.
In a significant shift from Labour’s foreign policy, Liam Fox, the Defence Secretary, said that Britain was not a “global policeman” and emphasised that the mission in Afghanistan was about making British streets safer rather than sending Afghan girls to school.
His comments, in an interview with The Times, came as the Ministry of Defence announced yesterday that 8,000 British troops in southern Afghanistan would come under the control of the US, a change that underlines Britain’s diminished role in the region.
Dr Fox, who is due to visit Afghanistan this weekend, plans to use the trip to explore ways to accelerate the departure of some 10,000 British troops. “We need to accept we are at the limit of numbers now and I would like the forces to come back as soon as possible,” he said.
More on link
Hold ground, then push forward, Canadian commander declares
Article Link
By Matthew Fisher, Canwest News Service May 27, 2010
As "tantalizing" as it is "to close with the enemy and kill them," Canada's new battle group commander says his troops must first consolidate gains in eastern Panjwaii, an area that was seized from the Taliban a few months ago and long dubbed 'the Wild West' by NATO forces.
"That is the easy part," Lt.-Col. Conrad Mialkowski said when asked if his soldiers intended to hunt down the Taliban in their western sanctuaries. "The hard part is to live among the people and have a positive impact on their lives.
"Before we go west, the Canadians, Americans and Afghans must hold what we have, and, if we are to go west, we must do it with the Afghan army and Afghan police. The days are gone when we would sally forth on our own."
The priority of British Maj.-Gen. Nick Carter, the International Security Assistance Force's commander in southern Afghanistan, has been to firm up "a ring of stability" around Kandahar City, which the alliance and the Taliban have both declared is the vital, possibly decisive ground in their long war. Achieving stability to the immediate southwest of the provincial capital has fallen to Mialkowski's Petawawa-based 1st Battalion, the Royal Canadian Regiment.
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