e-Ariana - Todays Afghan News
 Home 
 News 
 Articles 
 Cartoons 
 Feedback 
 Opinion  
 Contact Us  
 An Ariana Media Publication 03/10/2010
 Afghan picture confusing, US Marines' chief says

Reuters
02/02/2008
By

[Printer Friendly Version]

WASHINGTON - The Pentagon does not have a clear picture about the state of the war in Afghanistan, with U.S. commanders on the ground offering positive assessments while intelligence reports are more negative, the U.S. Marine Corps chief said on Friday.

Gen. James Conway said U.S. commanders on the ground pointed to signs of progress, such as the failure of Taliban militants to launch an offensive last spring or summer and the killing of some Taliban leaders.

But intelligence reports going back to 2004 showed Taliban attacks and the casualties they caused both rising. They also indicated a possible increase in the amount of territory the militants controlled and the influence they wield over Afghan tribes, Conway said.

"It is a bit confusing at this point Because we as a department need to see it the same way and quite frankly, at this point in time, we just don't," Conway told reporters.

Asked if that should be the case more than six years after the United States invaded Afghanistan, Conway replied: "Well, no... We as a department need to have a common view so that we can agree upon the actions that need to be taken -- no question about that."

The United States announced last month that it would send 3,200 Marines to Afghanistan to help stabilize the country.

The Bush administration has also urged NATO allies to send more troops and military trainers.

Two U.S. nongovernmental studies released this week said Afghanistan could once again become a failed state and terrorist haven unless there were new international efforts to win the war and develop the economy.

The United States has some 29,000 troops in Afghanistan. Around 16,000 serve in the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force while the remainder perform missions ranging from training Afghan forces to counter-terrorism. (Reporting by Andrew Gray, editing by Alan Elsner)

Back to Top



Other Stories:


Afghan Taliban Leaders Flee Possible Arrest
The Wall Street Journal (03/10/2010)

Friend Of My Enemy
RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty (03/10/2010)

Drug profits moving 'through Indian bank system'
AKI (03/10/2010)

Driven into the arms of the Taliban
IRIN (03/10/2010)

A new group of fundamentalists tries to force its morality on cultural life in Afghanistan
The Global Post (03/11/2010)

Top rights group slams new Afghan amnesty law
Reuters (03/10/2010)

Why former Arab mujahideen and Saudi lawyers hold the key to peace in Afghanistan
The Guardian (03/10/2010)

Ahmadinejad mocks Pentagon chief on visit to Kabul
AFP (03/10/2010)

March 10, 1993 - 60 people killed in Kabul attack
The Independent (03/10/2010)

Afghanistan: Repeal Amnesty Law
Human Rights Watch (HRW) (03/10/2010)

Faction feud forces Afghanistan militants to defect to government side
The Associated Press (03/10/2010)

Ahmadinejad: U.S. Playing Afghan "Double Game"
CBS (03/10/2010)

Afghanistan gets vows of friendship from U.S. and Iran
CNN (03/10/2010)

Karzai offers families ‘blood money’ for sons killed in raid
The Times (03/09/2010)

Britain to Hamid Karzai: you must talk to Taliban now
The Guardian (03/09/2010)

'Alone' in Afghanistan - Caught in Afghan numbers game
The Washington Post (03/09/2010)

In Marjah, New Gains Could Offer Escape From Tragic Past
RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty (03/09/2010)

German diplomat named to high UN post in Afghanistan
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (03/09/2010)

Child Rape in Afghanistan?
t r u t h o u t (03/10/2010)

Surge Incapacity
Foreign Policy (03/10/2010)

Where are Obama's foreign confidants?
The Washington Post (03/09/2010)

Afghan President to visit Pakistan for seeking help to hold talks with Taliban
Xinhua (03/09/2010)

Obamas celebrate women's achievements
United Press International (03/09/2010)

Ahmadinejad to Visit Afghanistan, Talk With Karzai
Bloomberg (03/08/2010)

Colonel Imam: Ideologue or Pragmatist?
Dawn, Pakistan (03/08/2010)

Blackwater and the Khost Bombing: Is the CIA Deceiving Congress?
The Nation (03/08/2010)

Reconciliation with Taliban not likely in near future, Gates says
The Washington Post (03/08/2010)

Afghan gov't bans using vehicles with tinted glasses
Xinhua (03/08/2010)

Interpreters Fate in a Broken Afghanistan
The New York Times (03/08/2010)

Womens rights trampled despite new law
IRIN (03/08/2010)


Back to Top