New Afghanistan commander says everyone should 'work together'
July 1, 2010"We must all work together," US General David Petraeus told NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen in Brussels on Thursday.
"Within the US structure we must work together, within the greater ISAF structure we must work together and then with our Afghan partners without question we must work together. We must achieve unity of effort in what is clearly an effort to achieve mutual objectives," he added.
General Petraeus said that he would give his forces the right firepower to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan but also insisted that a high priority was to spare civilian lives.
He said that although US troops were unhappy with the rules of engagement imposed by his predecessor, which limit air strikes and artillery and mortar fire to prevent civilian casualties, there was "no intent to change" them.
Compared to the same period last year, he said, there had been a 50 percent reduction in the loss of civilian lives in the past 12 weeks.
Only hope for salvaging NATO mission
The general, who was backed unanimously by the US Senate on Wednesday as the replacement for dismissed commander Stanley McChrystal in Afghanistan, is thought by some observers to be US President Obama's only hope for salvaging the unpopular international mission in the country, nine years after the Taliban were ousted.
He earned a reputation for himself in Iraq, where he is credited with pulling back the country from all-out sectarian warfare, and is "clearly qualified" for the task ahead in Afghanistan, Democrat Senator Russ Feingold said.
"Regardless of who is in command, the president's current strategy is counterproductive," Feingold added.
After the confirmation in Washington, President Obama said that "the Senates quick action and General Petraeus' unrivalled experience will ensure we do not miss a beat in our strategy to break the Taliban's momentum and build Afghan capacity."
Fighting could get "more intense"
The general is taking over at a time when the insurgency in Afghanistan is extremely deadly, with 100 foreign troops being killed in June alone the worse toll since the war began in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States.
Petraeus has warned the counter-insurgency could get "more intense" in the next few months.
On Wednesday, Taliban fighters attacked a major NATO base in eastern Afghanistan.
The war is increasingly unpopular in the US and in the other NATO states. Politicians and military commanders are hoping to be able to withdraw international when the Afghan forces are able to take over security for their own country. However, Petraeus has said this could take "a number of years".
Petraeus, who was chosen for the job after McChrystal was fired by President Obama for insubordination, is expected to arrive in Afghanistan in the next few days.
act/AFP/Reuters
Editor: Thomas Baerthlein