AFGHANISTAN
Documents & Texts from Defenselink.mil
19 October 2009
Strategy Review Will
Continue to Move Forward, Gates Says
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
Questions about the legitimacy of Afghanistan’s
national elections are a complicating factor, but President Barack Obama’s
strategic review doesn’t hinge on the outcome, and ongoing military operations
aren’t being affected, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said today.
The Afghan election issue has “complicated
the situation for us,” Gates said, but he said he doesn’t expect
it to delay Obama’s decision on the larger issue of charting the way
forward in Afghanistan.
“My view is that whatever emerges in Kabul is going to be an evolutionary
process,” Gates told reporters traveling with him through Asia en route
to a NATO ministerial in Slovenia. “I think we are going to have to work
with this, going forward, and the president is going to have to make his decisions
within the context of that evolutionary process.”
The process goes beyond who ultimately wins the election, he said, to the Afghan
people’s confidence in their government’s legitimacy.
Ninety percent of the Afghan people don’t want the Taliban return to
power, a fact Gates said creates “some tremendous opportunities” if
the Taliban’s momentum is reversed.
U.S. and coalition forces are working alongside Afghan security forces to seize
these opportunities.
“Even though the president has further significant decisions in front
of him, we already have 68,000 American troops on the ground in Afghanistan
and almost 40,000 troops from other countries,” Gates said.
These troops “are not all just staying in their tents while we wait the
outcome of the elections,” he said. “We are not going to just sit
on our hands waiting for the outcome of this election and for the emergence
of a government in Kabul. We have operations under way and we will continue
to conduct those operations.
“So the key is, how do we move forward in a way that takes advantage
of that hostility to the Taliban -- and perhaps in no small measure, a memory
of what it was like when the Taliban ran the country -- and do so with the
Afghan people having confidence in the legitimacy of their government?” he
said.
Building that confidence is going to take time, with the United States and
its international partners working together with the Afghan government to help
it tackle corruption.
This is among the issues Gates said Obama and his national security team are
wrestling with as they review the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan.
“I see this as a process, not something that is going to happen all of
a sudden where one day you have a big problem and the next day you are not
going to have any problem,” he said. “It is not going to be complicated
one day and simple the next.”
Gates said he’s been satisfied with the “very deliberate process” under
way by the national security team in response to issues raised by Army Gen.
Stanley A. McChrystal’s assessment. McChrystal is the chief of U.S. and
NATO forces in Afghanistan.
The secretary conceded that the assessment “presented a much more challenging
situation in Afghanistan than we thought we faced” when Obama made his
initial decisions about the U.S. strategy there in March.
That’s broadened the scope of the review, he said, to include issues
ranging from troop levels to the need for more civilian assistance, to the
best way to reintegrate former Taliban members.
Gates said he believes Obama is nearing a point where he’ll begin addressing
some specific options his national security team presents.
The secretary said he sees the fact that the president’s review isn’t
yet completed as a positive, not a negative, when he attends a NATO ministerial
in Bratislava, Slovakia, later this week.
Noting that McChrystal’s assessment and resource request is being reviewed
through the NATO as well as U.S. chains of command, Gates said NATO has as
much responsibility in responding to it.
“The reality is, this is an alliance issue,” he said. “If
General McChrystal has an additional set of needs, it should not be looked
upon as exclusively the responsibility of the United States to respond.
“So I think having a discussion of that, and the fact that this is a
continuing shared responsibility, makes it entirely appropriate to have that
conversation in Bratislava before decisions are made by the United States,” he
continued. “This is an alliance issue.”
Gates said he’s going to the ministerial buoyed that NATO recognizes
this.
“Frankly, since the NATO summit last spring, I have seen more energy
and more commitment on behalf of both the military and civilian leadership
in the alliance than I have seen in the previous two years that I was in this
job,” he said.
Gates said he’s not sure what’s brought about this change, but
said both he and Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
have sensed it through their meetings and telephone conversations with their
NATO counterparts.
“There seems to be a renewed commitment that we have to do this and get
this done right. And I think that’s all for the good,” he said.
That’s sets the stage perfectly for the upcoming ministerial, he said.
“So my hope is -- still recognizing some of the domestic political challenges
that some of them face -- my hope is we can have a serious discussion about
how things have changed in Afghanistan since last spring, and a way forward
in which the alliance can share these responsibilities and work with the Afghan
government to move the situation in a more positive direction,” he said.
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