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KABUL, July 18 (Xinhuanet) -- The NATO-led International
Security Assistance Force (ISAF) will expend its responsibilities in southern
Afghanistan in early 2006, and hopes to take responsibility of the whole country
in two years, a NATO official has said.
When NATO assumes responsibility for the who country,
some US troops will continue to stay and operate in Afghanistan, Lieut. Gen.
Ethem Erdagi, the Turkish commander of ISAF in Afghanistan said Sunday.
The NATO-led ISAF in Afghanistan commands more than
8,000 soldiers from 37 countries, with the task of supporting the Afghan
government in safeguarding national security, and establishing national
institutions in accordance with the Bonn Agreement.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) assumed
leadership of the ISAF mission in August 2003. Afghanistan is the military
alliance's first ever mission outside the Euro-Atlantic area.
ISAF has taken the authority of north and west of
Afghanistan respectively early this year, and it will expand to the south in the
spring of 2006, and then to the east, in a counter-clockwise motion throughout
the country.
In order to guarantee safety for the upcoming
parliamentary election in September, ISAF has deployed eight F-16 fighter jets
from Belgium and the Netherlands as part of additional ISAF Election Support
Forces.
Over 2,000 Election Support Forces are to assist the
Afghan government in maintaining security, and advance parties of the contingent
from Romania and the Netherlands have begun arriving in Afghanistan.
Soldiers from Canada's elite troop unit the Joint
Task Force (JTF-2) will be heading to Afghanistan to join the fight against
al-Qaeda remnants, the Canadian Television reported Friday.
Australian Prime Minister John Howard announced
Wednesday that a special task force of some 150 troops was expected to be in
place by September, when the war-torn country is due to hold legislative
elections.
At the same time, a US-dominated Coalition force with
about 18,000 troops, has stayed in Afghanistan since the collapse of the former
Taliban regime to cleanse the remains of Taliban and al-Qaeda throughout the
country.
Taliban has waged a surge of violence against Afghan
and foreign troops since the beginning of this spring with the aim of derailing
the September 18 election. Dozens of militants have been killed recently by
Afghan and Coalition troops. ,Enditem |