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Britain to send more troops to Afghanistan
LONDON—British Defence Secretary John Reid said Sunday he was prepared
to send further troops to Afghanistan, a day after a British soldier was
killed in the country. The international coalition is seeking to beef up
its presence in southern Afghanistan and Britain would be ready to play
a role, Reid said.
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) troops mainly act as
peacekeepers in the destitute country since the 2001 US-led campaign
which ousted the Taliban regime. Britain has about 1,000 soldiers in
Afghanistan and newspaper reports had suggested that a further 3,000
troops could be deployed.
Reid said no decision had yet been taken. “We will be prepared if others
are, and if we can get the resources and the right back up,” he told BBC
television. “No reports at the moment can in any way be accurate because
I have not made a final decision”. He said that military means were not
the only way of assisting Afghanistan, adding that aid and trade were
also crucial.
On Saturday, gunmen opened fire on a vehicle carrying British ISAF
soldiers in the main northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, killing one and
wounding five. Reid said Saturday his “thoughts and sympathies” were
with the friends and relatives of the dead soldier. The last British
soldier to die in Afghanistan was killed in an apparent suicide bomb
attack in January last year.—Agencies |