Italy has offered 1,000 extra troops for Afghanistan next year, with the US saying it shows the "firm resolve" of NATO partners for its new surge strategy.
Italy's contribution will be spread out throughout the year and bring its troop strength to 3,800, making it one of the largest contingents in NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).
"The United States welcomes Italy's announcement that it will significantly increase its troop contributions in Afghanistan," said National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer.
"Italy's new commitment demonstrates the firm resolve of NATO allies and ISAF partners to succeed in our shared Afghan mission."
US President Barack Obama has consulted with Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and President Giorgio Napolitano as well as other NATO and ISAF leaders over the past several months, "and we look forward to continuing this close co-operation," Hammer said.
Earlier, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton predicted before heading to Brussels for a meeting of the western alliance that NATO allies would make a number of announcements over the coming days on extra troops.
"The response (from allies) has been positive. We feel good about this," Clinton said.
More than 20 of the 43 nations involved in ISAF have signalled they would increase their contribution to the force, following Obama's announcement on Tuesday that he would surge 30,000 troops into Afghanistan within six months.
The president also called on US allies to do more in the eight-year war, saying they too were threatened by terror networks emanating from Afghanistan.
Albania has offered 85 more soldiers and Poland suggested it could send 600 more.
Germany extended for one year the mandate of its 4,300-strong contingent, the third largest in Afghanistan after the United States and Britain, but did not increase its numbers.
Germany and France have both said they will wait until a London conference on Afghanistan on January 28 to decide on further action.
Source: news.smh.com.au/
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Showing posts with label 000. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 000. Show all posts
Friday, December 4, 2009
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Obama orders 34,000-strong Afghan surge
US President Barack Obama has issued orders to his US military commanders as he prepares to announce up to 34,000 additional US troops for Afghanistan in a revitalised war strategy against the Taliban. After months of deliberation, Mr Obama will announce today a US "exit strategy" that many in his own Democratic Party fear will mire the nation deeper in the eight-year conflict.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs confirmed yesterday the US President had "issued the orders" as commander-in-chief.
Today's announcement during a nationally televised broadcast will take US forces in Afghanistan to more than 100,000 -- the largest number since former president George W. Bush sent troops into the country after the terrorist attacks on the US on September 11, 2001. There are now 68,000 US troops committed to the Afghan war after Mr Obama deployed 21,000 extra soldiers earlier this year.
Mr Obama's decision follows a specially commissioned review of military operations by the US commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal.
Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar.
End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar.
Today's military deployment is expected to go close to the main recommendation of General McChrystal that the US send a further 40,000 troops.
For months, the US President has wrestled with the conundrum of fighting what he calls a "necessary war" to stop Afghanistan again becoming a haven for al-Qa'ida terrorists harboured by the Taliban. His deliberations have been made difficult as US voters have increasingly turned against the war.
A majority no longer backs the war effort and questions the purpose of fighting. Much of Mr Obama's message today will be to persuade Americans that the US effort is needed to prevent a further terrorist attack, and that the President intends the renewed war effort as part of an "end game" that would result in the withdrawal of US forces.
Mr Gibbs yesterday said during a White House briefing: "This is not an open-ended commitment."
The troop boost has been made necessary by a serious deterioration in the US and allied military position over the past 12 months as the Taliban has regained control in many areas of the country. The US has also lost faith in its Afghan government partner, which has failed to train local forces.
Mr Obama has said he wants to hand his successor a clean slate in Afghanistan that would mean no further US military involvement and a transfer of authority to
the elected Afghan government.
Coinciding with the US troops boost, the President is also seeking at least 5000 additional troops from NATO forces.
In a meeting with Kevin Rudd yesterday, Mr Obama accepted that Australia's commitment of 1550 troops was sufficient after a further 450 was offered in April.
Britain would send an extra 500 troops to Afghanistan this month, tipping its deployment there over the 10,000 mark, Prime Minister Gordon Brown said yesterday.
Mr Brown said Britain's extra troops would be accompanied by new forces from at least eight other NATO allies.
"I can confirm that we will now move to a force level of 9500," Mr Brown told the House of Commons, adding that the total number of personnel in the area would be "in excess of 10,000 troops".
Reports yesterday said the US had asked France to provide a further 1500 troops.
Source:theaustralian.com.au
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs confirmed yesterday the US President had "issued the orders" as commander-in-chief.
Today's announcement during a nationally televised broadcast will take US forces in Afghanistan to more than 100,000 -- the largest number since former president George W. Bush sent troops into the country after the terrorist attacks on the US on September 11, 2001. There are now 68,000 US troops committed to the Afghan war after Mr Obama deployed 21,000 extra soldiers earlier this year.
Mr Obama's decision follows a specially commissioned review of military operations by the US commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal.
Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar.
End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar.
Today's military deployment is expected to go close to the main recommendation of General McChrystal that the US send a further 40,000 troops.
For months, the US President has wrestled with the conundrum of fighting what he calls a "necessary war" to stop Afghanistan again becoming a haven for al-Qa'ida terrorists harboured by the Taliban. His deliberations have been made difficult as US voters have increasingly turned against the war.
A majority no longer backs the war effort and questions the purpose of fighting. Much of Mr Obama's message today will be to persuade Americans that the US effort is needed to prevent a further terrorist attack, and that the President intends the renewed war effort as part of an "end game" that would result in the withdrawal of US forces.
Mr Gibbs yesterday said during a White House briefing: "This is not an open-ended commitment."
The troop boost has been made necessary by a serious deterioration in the US and allied military position over the past 12 months as the Taliban has regained control in many areas of the country. The US has also lost faith in its Afghan government partner, which has failed to train local forces.
Mr Obama has said he wants to hand his successor a clean slate in Afghanistan that would mean no further US military involvement and a transfer of authority to
the elected Afghan government.
Coinciding with the US troops boost, the President is also seeking at least 5000 additional troops from NATO forces.
In a meeting with Kevin Rudd yesterday, Mr Obama accepted that Australia's commitment of 1550 troops was sufficient after a further 450 was offered in April.
Britain would send an extra 500 troops to Afghanistan this month, tipping its deployment there over the 10,000 mark, Prime Minister Gordon Brown said yesterday.
Mr Brown said Britain's extra troops would be accompanied by new forces from at least eight other NATO allies.
"I can confirm that we will now move to a force level of 9500," Mr Brown told the House of Commons, adding that the total number of personnel in the area would be "in excess of 10,000 troops".
Reports yesterday said the US had asked France to provide a further 1500 troops.
Source:theaustralian.com.au
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
U.S. war prisons legal vacuum for 14,000

In the few short years since the first shackled Afghan shuffled off to Guantanamo, the U.S. military has created a global network of overseas prisons, its islands of high security keeping 14,000 detainees beyond the reach of established law.
Disclosures of torture and long-term arbitrary detentions have won rebuke from leading voices including the U.N. secretary-general and the U.S. Supreme Court. But the bitterest words come from inside the system, the size of several major U.S. penitentiaries.
"It was hard to believe I'd get out," Baghdad shopkeeper Amjad Qassim al-Aliyawi told The Associated Press after his release — without charge — last month. "I lived with the Americans for one year and eight months as if I was living in hell."
Captured on battlefields, pulled from beds at midnight, grabbed off streets as suspected insurgents, tens of thousands now have passed through U.S. detention, the vast majority in Iraq.
Many say they were caught up in U.S. military sweeps, often interrogated around the clock, then released months or years later without apology, compensation or any word on why they were taken. Seventy to 90 percent of the Iraq detentions in 2003 were "mistakes," U.S. officers once told the international Red Cross.
Defenders of the system, which has only grown since soldiers' photos of abuse at Abu Ghraib shocked the world, say it's an unfortunate necessity in the battles to pacify Iraq and Afghanistan, and to keep suspected terrorists out of action.
Every U.S. detainee in Iraq "is detained because he poses a security threat to the government of Iraq, the people of Iraq or coalition forces," said U.S. Army Lt. Col. Keir-Kevin Curry, a spokesman for U.S.-led military detainee operations in Iraq.
But dozens of ex-detainees, government ministers, lawmakers, human rights activists, lawyers and scholars in Iraq, Afghanistan and the United States said the detention system often is unjust and hurts the war on terror by inflaming anti-Americanism in Iraq and elsewhere.
Building for the Long Term
Reports of extreme physical and mental abuse, symbolized by the notorious Abu Ghraib prison photos of 2004, have abated as the Pentagon has rejected torture-like treatment of the inmates. Most recently, on Sept. 6, the Pentagon issued a new interrogation manual banning forced nakedness, hooding, stress positions and other abusive techniques.
The same day, President Bush said the CIA's secret outposts in the prison network had been emptied, and 14 terror suspects from them sent to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to face trial in military tribunals. The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down the tribunal system, however, and the White House and Congress are now wrestling over the legal structure of such trials.
Living conditions for detainees may be improving as well. The U.S. military cites the toilets of Bagram, Afghanistan: In a cavernous old building at that air base, hundreds of detainees in their communal cages now have indoor plumbing and privacy screens, instead of exposed chamber pots.
Whatever the progress, small or significant, grim realities persist.
Human rights groups count dozens of detainee deaths for which no one has been punished or that were never explained. The secret prisons — unknown in number and location — remain available for future detainees. The new manual banning torture doesn't cover CIA interrogators. And thousands of people still languish in a limbo, deprived of one of common law's oldest rights, habeas corpus, the right to know why you are imprisoned.
"If you, God forbid, are an innocent Afghan who gets sold down the river by some warlord rival, you can end up at Bagram and you have absolutely no way of clearing your name," said John Sifton of Human Rights Watch in New York. "You can't have a lawyer present evidence, or do anything organized to get yourself out of there."
The U.S. government has contended it can hold detainees until the "war on terror" ends — as it determines.
"I don't think we've gotten to the question of how long," said retired admiral John D. Hutson, former top lawyer for the U.S. Navy. "When we get up to 'forever,' I think it will be tested" in court, he said.
The Navy is planning long-term at Guantanamo. This fall it expects to open a new, $30-million maximum-security wing at its prison complex there, a concrete-and-steel structure replacing more temporary camps.
In Iraq, Army jailers are a step ahead. Last month they opened a $60-million, state-of-the-art detention center at Camp Cropper, near Baghdad's airport. The Army oversees about 13,000 prisoners in Iraq at Cropper, Camp Bucca in the southern desert, and Fort Suse in the Kurdish north.
Neither prisoners of war nor criminal defendants, they are just "security detainees" held "for imperative reasons of security," spokesman Curry said, using language from an annex to a U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing the U.S. presence here.
Questions of Law, Sovereignty
President Bush laid out the U.S. position in a speech Sept. 6.
"These are enemy combatants who are waging war on our nation," he said. "We have a right under the laws of war, and we have an obligation to the American people, to detain these enemies and stop them from rejoining the battle."
But others say there's no need to hold these thousands outside of the rules for prisoners of war established by the Geneva Conventions.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan declared last March that the extent of arbitrary detention here is "not consistent with provisions of international law governing internment on imperative reasons of security."
Meanwhile, officials of Nouri al-Maliki's 4-month-old Iraqi government say the U.S. detention system violates Iraq's national rights.
"As long as sovereignty has transferred to Iraqi hands, the Americans have no right to detain any Iraqi person," said Fadhil al-Sharaa, an aide to the prime minister. "The detention should be conducted only with the permission of the Iraqi judiciary."
At the Justice Ministry, Deputy Minister Busho Ibrahim told AP it has been "a daily request" that the detainees be brought under Iraqi authority.
There's no guarantee the Americans' 13,000 detainees would fare better under control of the Iraqi government, which U.N. officials say holds 15,000 prisoners.
But little has changed because of these requests. When the Americans formally turned over Abu Ghraib prison to Iraqi control on Sept. 2, it was empty but its 3,000 prisoners remained in U.S. custody, shifted to Camp Cropper.
Life in Custody
The cases of U.S.-detained Iraqis are reviewed by a committee of U.S. military and Iraqi government officials. The panel recommends criminal charges against some, release for others. As of Sept. 9, the Central Criminal Court of Iraq had put 1,445 on trial, convicting 1,252. In the last week of August, for example, 38 were sentenced on charges ranging from illegal weapons possession to murder, for the shooting of a U.S. Marine.
Almost 18,700 have been released since June 2004, the U.S. command says, not including many more who were held and then freed by local military units and never shipped to major prisons.
Some who were released, no longer considered a threat, later joined or rejoined the insurgency.
The review process is too slow, say U.N. officials. Until they are released, often families don't know where their men are — the prisoners are usually men — or even whether they're in American hands.
Ex-detainee Mouayad Yasin Hassan, 31, seized in April 2004 as a suspected Sunni Muslim insurgent, said he wasn't allowed to obtain a lawyer or contact his family during 13 months at Abu Ghraib and Bucca, where he was interrogated incessantly. When he asked why he was in prison, he said, the answer was, "We keep you for security reasons."
Another released prisoner, Waleed Abdul Karim, 26, recounted how his guards would wield their absolute authority.
"Tell us about the ones who attack Americans in your neighborhood," he quoted an interrogator as saying, "or I will keep you in prison for another 50 years."
As with others, Karim's confinement may simply have strengthened support for the anti-U.S. resistance. "I will hate Americans for the rest of my life," he said.
As bleak and hidden as the Iraq lockups are, the Afghan situation is even less known. Accounts of abuse and deaths emerged in 2002-2004, but if Abu Ghraib-like photos from Bagram exist, none have leaked out. The U.S. military is believed holding about 500 detainees — most Afghans, but also apparently Arabs, Pakistanis and Central Asians.
The United States plans to cede control of its Afghan detainees by early next year, five years after invading Afghanistan to eliminate al-Qaida's base and bring down the Taliban government. Meanwhile, the prisoners of Bagram exist in a legal vacuum like that elsewhere in the U.S. detention network.
"There's been a silence about Bagram, and much less political discussion about it," said Richard Bennett, chief U.N. human rights officer in Afghanistan.
Freed detainees tell how in cages of 16 inmates they are forbidden to speak to each other. They wear the same orange jumpsuits and shaven heads as the terrorist suspects at Guantanamo, but lack even the scant legal rights granted inmates at that Cuba base. In some cases, they have been held without charge for three to four years, rights workers say.
Guantanamo received its first prisoners from Afghanistan — chained, wearing blacked-out goggles — in January 2002. A total of 770 detainees were sent there. Its population today of Afghans, Arabs and others, stands at 455.
Described as the most dangerous of America's "war on terror" prisoners, only 10 of the Guantanamo inmates have been charged with crimes. Charges are expected against 14 other al-Qaida suspects flown in to Guantanamo from secret prisons on Sept. 4.
Plans for their trials are on hold, however, because of a Supreme Court ruling in June against the Bush administration's plan for military tribunals.
The court held the tribunals were not authorized by the U.S. Congress and violated the Geneva Conventions by abrogating prisoners' rights. In a sometimes contentious debate, the White House and Congress are trying to agree on a new, acceptable trial plan.
Since the court decision, and after four years of confusing claims that terrorist suspects were so-called "unlawful combatants" unprotected by international law, the Bush administration has taken steps recognizing that the Geneva Conventions' legal and human rights do extend to imprisoned al-Qaida militants. At the same time, however, the new White House proposal on tribunals retains such controversial features as denying defendants access to some evidence against them.
In his Sept. 6 speech, Bush acknowledged for the first time the existence of the CIA's secret prisons, believed established at military bases or safehouses in such places as Egypt, Indonesia and eastern Europe. That network, uncovered by journalists, had been condemned by U.N. authorities and investigated by the Council of Europe.
The clandestine jails are now empty, Bush announced, but will remain a future option for CIA detentions and interrogation.
Louise Arbour, U.N. human rights chief, is urging Bush to abolish the CIA prisons altogether, as ripe for "abusive conduct." The CIA's techniques for extracting information from prisoners still remain secret, she noted.
Meanwhile, the U.S. government's willingness to resort to "extraordinary rendition," transferring suspects to other nations where they might be tortured, appears unchanged.
Prosecutions and Memories
The exposure of sadistic abuse, torture and death at Abu Ghraib two years ago touched off a flood of courts-martial of mostly lower-ranking U.S. soldiers. Overall, about 800 investigations of alleged detainee mistreatment in Iraq and Afghanistan have led to action against more than 250 service personnel, including 89 convicted at courts-martial, U.S. diplomats told the United Nations in May.
Critics protest that penalties have been too soft and too little has been done, particularly in tracing inhumane interrogation methods from the far-flung islands of the overseas prison system back to policies set by high-ranking officials.
In only 14 of 34 cases has anyone been punished for the confirmed or suspected killings of detainees, the New York-based Human Rights First reports. The stiffest sentence in a torture-related death has been five months in jail. The group reported last February that in almost half of 98 detainee deaths, the cause was either never announced or reported as undetermined.
Looking back, the United States overreacted in its treatment of detainees after Sept. 11, said Anne-Marie Slaughter, a noted American scholar of international law.
It was understandable, the Princeton University dean said, but now "we have to restore a balance between security and rights that is consistent with who we are and consistent with our security needs."
Otherwise, she said, "history will look back and say that we took a dangerous and deeply wrong turn."
Back here in Baghdad, at the Alawi bus station, a gritty, noisy hub far from the meeting rooms of Washington and Geneva, women gather with fading hopes whenever a new prisoner release is announced.
As she watched one recent day for a bus from distant Camp Bucca, one mother wept and told her story.
"The Americans arrested my son, my brother and his friend," said Zahraa Alyat, 42. "The Americans arrested them October 16, 2005. They left together and I don't know anything about them."
The bus pulled up. A few dozen men stepped off, some blindfolded, some bound, none with any luggage, none with familiar faces.
As the distraught women straggled away once more, one ex-prisoner, 18-year-old Bilal Kadhim Muhssin, spotted U.S. troops nearby.
"Americans," he muttered in fear. "Oh, my God, don't say that name," and he bolted for a city bus, and freedom.
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