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More troops needed to secure Afghanistan's lawless border: military

Two British soldiers killed in Afghanistan: ministry
Two British soldiers were killed and a third was injured after coming under enemy fire in Afghanistan on Thursday, the defence ministry in London said. Their deaths take the overall total of British troops killed in the country since the US-led invasion in 2001 to 102. The ministry said the soldiers' families had been informed and requested a 24-hour grace period before details were released. According to a ministry statement, soldiers from the 2nd Battalion the Parachute Regiment were conducting "a routine foot patrol in the vicinity of their base" in the restive southern Helmand province "when they came under enemy fire, tragically killing two of the patrol party." The third soldier was receiving treatment for his wounds at Camp Bastion medical centre. Britain has approximately 7,800 soldiers in Afghanistan, most of whom are in Helmand fighting the Islamist Taliban militia, who have been waging a bloody insurgency since being ousted from power in the 2001 invasion.
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) June 12, 2008
Coalition forces will suffer more casualties and take longer to secure Afghanistan's lawless border with Pakistan without more troops, a senior US military official said here Thursday.

Vice Admiral William Sullivan also expressed concern that Pakistan will remove troops from its side of the border as part of peace deals the new government has struck with militants in the tribal areas.

"Peace agreements allow the opposing militant forces to regroup, resupply, retrain themselves. And so we think it gives them breathing room without being threatened on the Pakistan side of the border," said Sullivan.

NATO defence ministers meeting here are expected to discuss the situation in Afghanistan over dinner Thursday.

The review comes amid heightened tension with Pakistan in the wake of a US air strike that Islamabad says killed 11 Pakistani soldiers but which the United States has defended as a "legitimate" response to an attack by insurgents.

Sullivan, the senior US military represenatative on NATO's military committee, said more troops were needed to stop the flow of fighters from Pakistan into southern and eastern Afghanistan.

"Can it be solved without additional forces? The commander's assessment is yes, it could be," Sullivan told reporters.

"But it will take longer, it would likely result in more casualties to allied troops in the time that it takes to achieve these results without more forces," he said.

The United States has pressed allies to commit more troops to Afghanistan and to lift restrictions on their use. But so far the response has been tepid.

At a NATO summit in Bucharest in April, France agreed to send 700 additional troops, which will deploy later this year in an area near Kabul in eastern Afghanistan.

The United States also deployed 3,500 marines this year, but they are due to leave in November.

Sullivan said that, including the US contribution, about 8,000 troops have been added to the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force this year.

NATO says there are now 52,700 troops in ISAF.

Sullivan said that is still three battalions short of the approved requirement. ISAF's former commander, General Dan McNeill, has said 10,000 troops are needed.

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Canada should try talking to Taliban: lawmakers
Ottawa (AFP) June 11, 2008
Canadian diplomats and troops should try talking to the Taliban to stem their insurgency in Afghanistan, a Canadian senate committee said Wednesday in a report.







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