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THE STANS
Rushed Afghan exit 'bad for image': Australia
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Sept 2, 2012


US special forces suspend training of Afghans: report
Washington (AFP) Sept 1, 2012 - The commander of US special forces in Afghanistan has suspended training for all new Afghan recruits until Afghan soldiers are re-investigated for ties to insurgents, The Washington Post reported late Saturday.

The newspaper said the re-vetting process will affect more than 27,000 Afghan troops.

The suspension comes in response to the killing of at least 45 US troops this year by their Afghan colleagues.

"We have a very good vetting process," the paper quotes an unnamed senior special operations official as saying. "What we learned is that you just can't take it for granted. We probably should have had a mechanism to follow up with recruits from the beginning."

According to The Post, numerous military guidelines were not followed by either Afghans or Americans because of concerns that they might slow the growth of the Afghan army and police.

NATO has some 130,000 troops in Afghanistan fighting the Taliban's decade-long insurgency alongside government forces.

Most of the NATO troops are set to withdraw by the end of 2014 in a US-designed transition process that will put Afghan security forces in charge of security for their war-battered country.

The process is already under way, with security responsibilities of about half of the Afghan population transferred to the local security forces.

The Taliban have stepped up their attacks in recent months as part of efforts by the insurgency to undermine the transition process.

Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr on Sunday acknowledged the nation's weariness with the Afghan conflict after five more troop deaths but warned of "enormous" damage to its image if it pulled out now.

Carr said an accelerated Australian withdrawal would also put other coalition nations under significant pressure from their own citizens to follow suit, jeopardising the chance to leave Afghanistan with a stable government.

"The choice here is whether we have a panicky dash, Australia rupturing an alliance that is the largest in history ... Australia making a dash for it that would do our reputation harm, enormous harm," Carr told Sky News.

"(It would send the message to) Turkey or Germany -- you're now embarrassed, you've got to justify to your own electorates why you're sticking with this task but we Australians are out of it".

Australia lost five soldiers in two separate incidents Thursday in its deadliest day in Afghanistan and the worst day for combat casualties in its history since the Vietnam War, renewing questions about its involvement.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton praised Australia's resolve after Prime Minister Julia Gillard restated her government's commitment to Afghanistan despite the latest deaths, which took its total toll to 38.

Carr said "everyone is weary of this war", including the insurgents, but emphasised that Australia had to stay the course.

"I don't want to give the impression that it's only a consideration of the US alliance that keeps us sticking to this programme for a phased, orderly, controlled withdrawal," Carr said.

"But I can assure you the US would be very critical of (an) Australia which suddenly altered its character and said 'we're not with the other 50 nations, we're not with plan that's been put into place ... we're bolting'."

Carr noted that 75 percent of Afghanistan now had security from local forces and 5,000 mid-level insurgent fighters had laid down their weapons, adding that Australia's final 2014 exit date was not negotiable.

"The United States has made it very clear, and we've done, that there's no appetite on our side to stay there a day longer than we need to," he said.

Australia, a key ally of the US, has said it is committed to remaining in its base in Uruzgan province where it has some 1,550 troops until it can hand over security to local forces, likely in late 2013.

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THE STANS
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