NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and it's relevance, it's decline and it's possible disappearance?
While NATO's 28 member countries grapple with how to improve their chances of beating the Taliban, the alliance is facing growing criticism over how the mission has been conducted and whether it can go on for much longer.
However, they endorsed a recent assessment by ISAF's commander, U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, that tens of thousands of additional troops are needed or NATO will lose to the Taliban... but stopped short of committing more troops.
Rick Hillier, a retired Canadian general provides a written attack on the alliance's performance in Afghanistan from his time there as commander of ISAF.
"The mission's leadership is "abysmal," he writes. Staff at NATO's headquarters in Kabul "had no strategy, no clear articulation of what they wanted to achieve, no political guidance and few forces.
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Afghanistan has shown that the alliance has become "a corpse, decomposing," Hillier concludes. "Unless the alliance can snatch victory out of feeble efforts, it's not going to be long in existence in its present form."
Ret. Gen. Lewis MacKenzie, a Canadian who worked with the alliance in the early 1990s has voiced similar concerns.
Unity of command has proved elusive, as has co-ordination between NATO and EU efforts.
* Canada has pledged to stop its military operations there by the end of 2010.
* The Dutch parliament passed a motion earlier this month barring the renewal of its Afghan presence.
* And Denmark's leader recently said his country's commitment depends on whether Afghanistan's Nov. 7 presidential runoff goes well.
* Many European countries may follow whatever Germany decides to do and it's a tough slog in Germany.."The image of German soldiers killing civilians haunts the debate, given their history."
Obama is said to be waiting for Afghanistan's political situation to stabilize, before announcing whether he will grant McChrystal's request for more troops.
Already the U.S. has about as many soldiers in Afghanistan as the other 41 countries participating in ISAF put together.
Dan Hamilton, a NATO expert at the Center for Transatlantic Relations said.."Afghanistan is the most acute and direct security threat to Europeans and North Americans that we face in the world today, if we aren't able to master our most direct challenge, then what's the alliance for?"
Read the whole article for a clearer picture as to how it relates to the o.p.
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