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Difficulty of Afghanistan mission underestimated: NATO chief

Briton killed in north Iraq attack: embassy
Baghdad (AFP) July 19, 2010 - A Briton was killed in an attack on a private security firm's convoy in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul on Monday, British government officials said. "One British national was killed today during an attack against a convoy in east Mosul," British embassy spokeswoman Sophie Farrell told AFP, without identifying the victim. Farrell said no other Briton was hurt. Britain's Foreign Office confirmed the death, saying the attack was on a private security convoy. "A British national was killed in an attack on a British private security company convoy in Mosul this morning. We have offered consular assistance," a Foreign Office spokesman said. There was no immediate confirmation from the Iraqi side.

But police in Mosul said five people were wounded in the morning in a car bomb attack that targeted a foreign security firm in the city, without providing further details. Mosul is Iraq's second largest city and the capital of volatile Nineveh province. Britain provided the second-largest contingent of troops to the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, with a deployment which peaked at 46,000. It ended combat operations in Iraq in April 2009, when all but a handful of British soldiers started returning home. Some 100 military are still deployed in the southern port of Umm Qasr where they train the Iraqi navy. In other attacks on Monday, a bomb in a car parked in front of a coffee shop killed seven people and wounded 21 in Baquba, 60 kilometres (35 miles) north of Baghdad, according to police.

A member of the Sahwa (Awakening) militia was killed and three wounded by a sticky bomb on their car in the centre of Fallujah, 60 kilometres (35 miles) west of Baghdad, police said. That attack came a day after 45 Sahwa members were killed in a suicide bombing in Radwaniyah, also in western Iraq, as they queued to receive their pay. In Baghdad, a roadside bomb targeted the convoy of Iraq's deputy agriculture minister, Mehdi Dhamad, the interior ministry said. Dhamad escaped unharmed but five people, including a bodyguard, were wounded. And a man was shot dead in front of his home in Kirkuk, 240 kilometres (150 miles) north of the capital, local police said.
by Staff Writers
Copenhagen (AFP) July 19, 2010
The international community failed to fully appreciate the difficulty of defeating the Taliban and rebuilding Afghanistan, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Monday.

"I believe the international community underestimated the mission in Afghanistan," Rasmussen said in an interview with Danish TV station TV2 News ahead of a conference of donors in Kabul Tuesday.

"That is why it is taking a long time to help the Afghans establish sufficient capacity to rebuild the country and ensure peace and stability," he said.

Representatives of 60 countries, including US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, will meet in the Afghan capital in a bid to build on pledges made at a conference in London in January.

"Keep in mind that after the fall of the Taliban in 2001, Afghan society had to be rebuilt from nothing," Rasmussen said.

The NATO chief said he was optimistic about the future of Afghanistan, but admitted that the losses suffered by the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force were "too high".

The death toll has reached 379 since the start of the year, which Rasmussen said was due to increasing numbers of soldiers being deployed to root out Taliban strongholds in Helmand and Kandahar.

"The Taliban know that if they lose these strongholds, they lose everything. That is why they are counterattacking hard, which unfortunately will lead to more deaths in the coming weeks and months," he said.

Rasmussen said NATO's efforts to train Afghan soldiers and police were ahead of schedule, and the gradual transfer of security to local forces would be launched at a NATO summit in November.

"We are in agreement with the Afghan government over the manner of transfering this responsibility," said Rasmussen, adding that details would be spelled out in a document to be released at Tuesday's conference.

At the conference, Afghan President Hamid Karzai is expected to lay out a timeframe that would see foreign combat troops withdraw by the end of 2014, according to diplomatic sources.

"NATO is five months ahead of schedule in the training of the Afghan army," said Rasmussen, while urging member states to provide more trainers.

The objective of training 134,000 soldiers by the end of 2010 has already been achieved, and a total of 300,000 soldiers and police will be trained by October 2011, he said.



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