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NATO assumes
control in Afghanistan
KABUL—NATO took over eastern Afghanistan from U.S.-led forces Thursday,
assuming control of 13,000 American troops and command of the entire
country.
The commander of the NATO-led force, British Lt. Gen. David Richards,
called the move "historic" in a ceremony attended by Afghan President
Hamid Karzai and U.S. Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry, the top U.S. military
commander in Afghanistan.
The U.S., with 13,250 troops, will remain the biggest contributor of
troops to the 33,000-strong force.
Of the 41,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan, only 8,000 U.S. troops will
function outside NATO control: those tracking al-Qaida terrorists or
involved in air operations. The overall level of American forces will
remain around 21,000.
"A key point to remember in this transition is that the United States
maintains its full commitment to Afghanistan. It will be undiminished,"
Eikenberry said.
The command consolidation confines direct U.S. control to a single chief
enclave: the sprawling American base at Bagram. A U.S. Army helicopter
unit based at Kandahar airfield also will remain under American
oversight.
U.S.-operated prisons and interrogation centers at Bagram will remain
under U.S. command, while NATO will continue to transfer its detainees
to Afghan police.
NATO troops took command of southern Afghanistan just two months ago and
have struggled to stem escalating violence there. The alliance also has
troops in the north and west of the country and patrols the capital,
Kabul.
The NATO takeover caps an already historic expansion of missions for the
largely European alliance, which was created as a Cold War bulwark
against the Soviet Union. Its combat role in southern Afghanistan is the
largest the alliance has ever undertaken.
The Taliban have recently staged an unexpected resurgence and stepped up
attacks, triggering major battles that have left more than a thousand
dead in the past few months.
An American four-star general, Army Gen. Dan K. McNeil, will take charge
of both U.S. and NATO forces in February, provided he is confirmed by
the U.S. Senate.
The new command structure leaves Eikenberry's role in doubt. ISAF
spokesman Maj. Luke Knittig said he may remain in Afghanistan, but under
the auspices of the U.S. Embassy.—Agencies |