NATO
Progress in Afghanistan Significant, General Says
By
Samantha L. Quigley
AFPS
Despite
the task NATO faced when it arrived in Afghanistan in 2003,
the alliance has made significant progress in the country,
the deputy chairman of the alliance’s military committee said.
“NATO’s done a remarkable job … in expanding their operations,
from what began just in the Kabul area, throughout the entire country by late
2006,” U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Karl W. Eikenberry told the Pentagon Channel. “Today,
NATO does have the responsibility for the maintenance of security throughout
the entire country of Afghanistan.”
NATO came into Afghanistan under a United Nations mandate to
establish an International Security Assistance Force, or ISAF.
That force had the responsibility of providing security in the
greater capital area of Kabul.
By October 2006, NATO had expanded its operations throughout
the country and was tackling three main tasks, which it continues
today. Those tasks include helping the Afghan government extend
control throughout the country and developing the necessary security
institutions to maintain that control.
“The third major task is helping to create the conditions
throughout the country for sustainable reconstruction and development
to be conducted,” said Eikenberry, who commanded coalition
forces in Afghanistan until NATO assumed responsibility in October
2006.
About 47,000 NATO servicemembers, including about 19,000 Americans,
serve in the country under the NATO flag. Most of an additional
contingent of 3,200 U.S. Marines deploying to Afghanistan will
serve in combat roles in the eastern or southern areas of the
country.
“Others in the Marine forces will be employed in smaller
units that will be partnered with the Afghan National Police,” Eikenberry
said. They will provide training, logistics and combat support,
operating in the more difficult districts of Afghanistan that
are more threatened by Taliban, he added.
Steady engagement and lessons learned have led
not only to progress in Afghanistan, but also to growth in
alliance members’ capabilities.
“I look at our non-U.S. NATO partners, (and) I’m
seeing the same trends inside of Afghanistan of steady improvement
in terms of their doctrine, their capabilities (and) the equipment
they’re bringing to bear,” Eikenberry said. “I
also see that the alliance, in terms of multinational practices
or alliance practices, are steadily improving.”
That’s a fact the general has noticed in the relaxing
of some of the operational restrictions, or “caveats,” that
some alliance members place on their forces. Those restrictions
have in the past and could continue to reduce NATO’s overall
operational effectiveness, he said.
“But all told, again, I would emphasize that NATO has
made significant progress even in terms of, over time, reducing
these kinds of restrictions that are placed on forces,” he
added. “A bit more progress needs to be made.”
While the alliance’s mission moves forward in Afghanistan,
it’s status quo in the newly independent republic of Kosovo,
the general said.
The former Serbian province’s declaration
of independence has changed the environment on the ground,
Eikenberry said.
“But still today, the Kosovo force under NATO command
operates under the U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244, still
maintains the mandate of maintaining a safe and secure environment,
and it does so in an impartial manner,” he said.
The United States provides about 10 percent of the 16,000-member
NATO force in Kosovo.