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NATO sending new brigade to Afghanistan

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  • NATO sending new brigade to Afghanistan

    NATO sending new brigade to Afghanistan

    By RAHIM FAIEZ, Associated Press Writer

    KABUL, Afghanistan

    NATO-led troops battling resurgent Taliban militants will soon be reinforced with another combat brigade, the top NATO commander in Afghanistan said Thursday.

    Gen. David Richards said the brigade will consist of members of different nations participating in NATO's International Security Assistance Force. A brigade is typically 1,500 to 3,500 troops. Richards did not specify how many reinforcements he expected.

    "I anticipate at least another brigade of combat troops from ISAF nations coming here shortly and more after that," Richards told reporters.

    At NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, officials would not say what countries planned to send reinforcements, saying such announcements are up to individual nations.

    However, several countries plan to boost their contributions in answer to requests for more troops to join the fight against the Taliban in the spring.

    Poland is expected to send about 1,200 soldiers in February and British media have reported that Britain is considering deploying 600 extra troops. It was not clear if Richards was referring to those upcoming troop contributions.

    In addition, the U.S. Defense Department said Wednesday that 3,200 soldiers from the New York-based 10th Mountain Division already in the country would have their tour extended by four months.

    The NATO-led force, which is bracing for renewed fighting with Taliban militants this spring, is about 20 percent short of the troop levels pledged by its contributing nations.

    Richards made the comments during the opening of a joint operations center in Kabul that will be manned by officers from Afghanistan, Pakistan and NATO. The three are trying to increase coordination in their counter-insurgency efforts.

    Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have deteriorated recently, with top officials trading accusations on which side is responsible for the increase in Taliban attacks. Some 4,000 people died in insurgency-related violence in Afghanistan last year, according to numbers from Afghan, U.S. and NATO officials.



    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070126/...as/afghan_nato
    To sit down with these men and deal with them as the representatives of an enlightened and civilized people is to deride ones own dignity and to invite the disaster of their treachery - General Matthew Ridgway
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