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Arrests over 'direct threat' to Kabul conference: NATO

NATO boosts Afghanistan information sharing
The Hague (AFP) July 15, 2010 - NATO unveiled a new 30-million-euro computer network Thursday it said would streamline information-sharing between nations with troops in Afghanistan, thus saving money and lives. "From now on we have one mission, one network, one database which is available to all the nations deployed" in the fight against the Taliban, NATO official Major-General Leonardo di Marco told reporters in The Hague. The new Afghan Mission Network would see previously separated national, regional and NATO information systems all linked into one, said Di Marco, deputy chief of staff support of NATO's Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE).

"Up to now, a commander (in the field) would have at least two or three computers on his desk, one connected to a national system, another connected to a regional system and another to the ISAF (NATO's International Security Assistance Force) system," he said. Much of this information had to be transferred manually from one network to another. The new network would allow a faster and better exchange, in near real-time, of orders, intelligence and battle reports -- including video images. "We believe it will help commanders to accomplish the mission of reducing losses" of life, said Di Marco.

Georges d'Hollander, general manager of NATO's technical support agency, NC3A, said getting the system online had cost the alliance about 10 million euros (some 13 million dollars). By the time it is fully operational, by July next year, it would have cost about 30 million euros. The United States and NATO have 143,000 troops in Afghanistan, with the number due to rise to 150,000 in coming weeks as international forces step up their campaign against the Taliban. Afghanistan is in the grip of an insurgency now in its ninth year, with violence reaching record levels since the start of 2009.
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) July 15, 2010
The US-led NATO force said Thursday that two insurgents had been arrested for posing a "direct threat" to a major international conference due to take place in the Afghan capital next week.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and senior officials from over 60 countries and international organisations are scheduled to attend next Tuesday's conference to discuss the rebuilding of the troubled nation.

Afghan and NATO security forces have already stepped up security in Kabul to guard against possible Taliban attacks from marring the gathering.

The Taliban's nine-year insurgency against the Western-backed government is now at its deadliest.

Militants last month targeted a landmark Afghan peace conference in Kabul, firing rockets towards the gathering during a speech by President Hamid Karzai that ultimately resulted in the sacking of the interior minister and spy chief.

NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said its troops along with Afghan security forces raided a house and detained two "facilitators" of insurgent attacks in Kabul.

One was wanted over three suicide attacks on the city and both "were considered a direct threat to the international Kabul conference," ISAF said.

The men surrendered peacefully after troops using a loudspeaker to call on them to exit the house, ISAF said.

Tuesday's conference is a bid by Afghan government officials to call for a start to the spending of billions of dollars of pledged development funds.

Officials will present donors with their long-term national development strategy, following a donors' meeting in London in January.

Afghanistan is trying to rebuild with the help of international community, mainly Western powers following the overthrow of the Taliban regime in a US-led invasion in late 2001.

The efforts have however, been hampered by an Islamic insurgency launched by the Taliban following their ouster. The violence from the insurgency has peaked to new record levels since early last year.

earlier related report
Canada hands over Kandahar security to US military
Ottawa (AFP) July 15, 2010 - Canada relinquished command of Kandahar City in southern Afghanistan to the US army's 82nd Airborne Division on Thursday, as it begins to wind down its mission and NATO reshuffles its troops.

Canada's footprint in the war-torn nation has now shrunk to a brigade-sized unit south and west of the city in Dand, Daman and Panjwaii districts, after handing over the Zhari and Arghandab districts two weeks ago, Lieutenant Colonel Craig Dalton told a televised press conference.

Its entire force of 2,800 troops in Afghanistan will leave the country next year, as planned, after eight years spent routing insurgents as part of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force.

Canadian soldiers will focus on a "smaller area of operations" during the transition while NATO triples its number of troops in the region to 21,000 due largely to a US surge, Dalton said.

The Afghan National Army and the Afghan National Police will also double in size in the province this year, he added.

"This rising tide of security will set the conditions for the Afghans to defeat the insurgency," Dalton said.



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