Canada/NATO will not back down in Afghanistan

Hank C

Electoral Member
Jan 4, 2006
953
0
16
Calgary, AB
NATO will stick it out in Afghanistan even it it takes years: top generals
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OTTAWA (CP) - NATO has the political will and the military muscle to stick it out in Afghanistan, even if it takes a decade or more to rehabilitate the country, says the Canadian general who heads the alliance's military council.

Gen. Ray Henault says the commitment to rebuilding Afghanistan is strong within the 26 NATO countries and its other partners, including former eastern bloc members.

"The will is there, there's no doubt in my mind," he said in an interview.

The alliance has already agreed that it will take at least 10 years to get the troubled southwest Asian country back on its feet, Henault said.

The alliance has pledged billions of dollars and thousands of troops and reconstruction experts to the cause.

"The international community is very intent on helping Afghanistan."

Gen. Lance Smith, an American air force general who is a top NATO commander in charge of joint operations, said Afghanistan will be a tough job for the alliance.

"The will of the people is going to be tested," he said.

However, he added, NATO works on consensus and the 26 members are agreed on Afghanistan.

Henault, chief of Canada's defence staff before he became chairman of NATO's military council last May, is on his first official visit home to Canada for meetings with Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor and Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Canada has 2,000 troops in Afghanistan and is supporting a provincial reconstruction team in the perilous country around Kandahar in southern Afghanistan.

Canada's involvement in the region since 2002 has cost the lives of eight soldiers and a diplomat.

O'Connor, in his first major speech since being appointed as defence minister, said Canada will follow through on Afghanistan.

"We will stay the course because our mission in Afghanistan is important," he said. "It's important for the future of Afghanistan, it's important for the stability of the region and it's important for international security."

http://start.shaw.ca/start/enCA/News/NationalNewsArticle.htm?&src=n022347A.xml
 

Hank C

Electoral Member
Jan 4, 2006
953
0
16
Calgary, AB
Call me naive, but I have a strong feeling that the majority of folks in Afghanistan really welcome NATO presence there and want nothing more than freedom, a good economy, peace, and democracy. God bless all the afghans, canadians and all the international soilders who are involved in the effort. It will be an investment in a more secure future for that country and region of our world.