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US defense chief presses Senate on Afghan war funds

British marine killed in southern Afghanistan: ministry
London (AFP) July 13, 2010 - A British marine was shot dead on Tuesday while on foot patrol in the violence-wracked Sangin district of southern Afghanistan, the Ministry of Defence said. The marine's death was not related to the killing of three British army Gurkhas by a renegade Afghan soldier on Tuesday, the ministry said in a statement. The serviceman, from 40 Commando Royal Marines, was killed by small arms fire in the Sangin district of Helmand province, while on patrol with soldiers from the Afghan National Army. His family has been informed. British Defence Secretary Liam Fox announced last week that British troops would hand over control of Sangin to US forces by the end of the year. Around a third of Britain's fatalities in Afghanistan have occurred in Sangin. A total of 318 British serviceman have now been killed in Afghanistan since the start of military operations there in 2001 -- 280 of them as a result of hostile action. The remaining 38 died as a result of illness, non-combat injuries or accidents, or have not yet officially been assigned a cause of death pending the outcome of investigations.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 13, 2010
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said he pressed Republican senators during a lunchtime meeting Tuesday to help pass an embattled emergency spending measure to fund the Afghanistan troop "surge."

Emerging from the closed-door talks with the lawmakers, Gates told AFP he "absolutely" called on them to help approve legislation to pump another 37 billion dollars into the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

But he declined to give other details of the meeting, saying only that they had discussed "a range of military and defense issues."

With Democratic support for the war funding uncertain, the White House has courted Republican backing to pay for the president's plan to add some 30,000 more troops to the fight against Islamist fighters in Afghanistan.

The US House of Representatives approved the Afghan war funding July 1 only after beating back a stiff anti-war insurrection among the White House's Democratic allies and adding some 15 billion dollars in social spending.

But with November elections on the horizon, senate Republicans have said the war-funding bill should focus on military spending and warned they will oppose it unless congress removes the additional monies.

The House-passed spending bill also included nearly three billion in aid for Haiti in the wake of the devastating earthquake there, 701 million dollars of increased US-Mexico border security and 304 million dollars for the response to the catastrophic Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

The White House had welcomed the House addition of education monies aimed at helping struggling states avoid teacher layoffs, but threatened a veto over 800 million dollars in cuts to pay for the bill.

earlier related report
NATO chief warns against weak support for Afghan campaign
London (AFP) July 13, 2010 - The Taliban will escalate their attacks on international forces in Afghanistan if Western political support weakens in the face of the increasingly fierce insurgency, the head of NATO warned Tuesday.

Anders Fogh Rasmussen also told the Daily Telegraph newspaper he could not give a date when forces would leave the war-torn nation and urged troop-contributing countries to keep soldiers there "as long as necessary".

His comments came after a meeting Monday in London with British Prime Minister David Cameron, who last week told lawmakers he hoped to see the country's troops return home within five years.

"We can have our hopes, we can have our expectations, but I cannot give any guarantee as far as an exact date or year is concerned," the NATO secretary general said.

"The Taliban follow the political debate in troop-contributing countries closely," he said.

"If they discover that through their attacks, they can weaken the support for our presence in Afghanistan, they will just be encouraged to step up their attacks on foreign troops."

NATO and the United States have more than 140,000 troops in Afghanistan with another 10,000 due in coming weeks as part of the counter-insurgency strategy.

Rasmussen further warned that an early departure from Afghanistan could see the Taliban return to power and destabilise its nuclear-armed neighbour, Pakistan.

If international forces left Afghanistan too soon, "the Taliban would return to Afghanistan and Afghanistan would once again become a safe haven for terrorist groups who would use it as a launch pad for terrorist attacks on North America and Europe," he said.

"There would also be a risk of destabilising a neighbouring country, Pakistan, a nuclear power."

Following the NATO chief's meeting with Cameron, his office said they had "agreed on the central importance" of the NATO mission to its members security.

"The prime minister made clear that success in Afghanistan was his government's highest foreign policy and national security priority," said a statement.



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