KABUL
Secretary General North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato),
Jens Stoltenberg on Thursday reaffirmed the alliance's commitment to
stabilising Afghanistan and ensuring that the gains made are preserved
after the foreign combat mission ends in 2014.
Afghan security
forces have been largely left to fight the Taliban on their own this
year, in their first real test since Taliban were ousted from power in
2001 by US-led forces.
Government forces hold cities and towns and
district centres have also largely held out but police and army
casualties have been described as “unsustainable” and the Taliban have
regained territory in strategic provinces where they have resumed the
role of de facto government.
We cannot and we will not allow these gains to be lost,” he said, according to a Nato statement.
More than 4,600 Afghan troops have been killed in the war against the Taliban this year, a 6.5 per cent increase over last year.
Underscoring
the growing violence, officials in the eastern province of Paktia
accused the Taliban of executing eight civilians. The militants claimed
responsibility, saying the men who were shot were members of the
security forces.
President Ashraf Ghani told a joint news
conference with Stoltenberg that Nato's investment in the country's
350,000 strong security force had been a success and that he looked
forward to working with the alliance.
“After December 31, 2014,
only Afghan forces will be responsible for the use of weapons, this
however does not mean an end to cooperation with Nato, but the start of a
new process,” he told reporters.
A contingent of about 10,000
foreign troops, most of them American, will stay in Afghanistan after
the end of the year to train and support Afghan forces. About 1,800
Americans will be involved in counter-terrorism operations.
While aiming to maintain close ties with Nato and its Western members, Ghani is also looking to bolster alliances in Asia.
His
first official visit after taking office in September was to China,
which pledged $327 million to help ensure Afghanistan's stability
through 2017 – more than it has contributed since the US led invasion.
China
is connected to Afghanistan by a narrow, almost impassable mountain
corridor and is concerned instability along the Afghan border with
Pakistan could spur attacks by militant separates in its western
Xinjiang region.
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