Gates Babies German Cowards

February 9th, 2008 Posted By Pat Dollard.

0013729e4abe090e74a953.jpg
German Defense Minister Franz Josef Jung

MUNICH, Germany (Reuters) - U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates sought on Saturday to soothe tensions with Germany over NATO’s Afghan mission, saying relations would not suffer if Berlin did not provide more troops.

Germany reiterated it had no plans to boost troop levels or shift them to other parts of Afghanistan despite U.S. pressure, denying a magazine report to the contrary.

Gates has pressed Berlin and other allies to provide more troops and other resources for the 43,000-strong NATO force battling Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan.

The pressure has caused problems for the German government, as it tries to maintain good relations with Washington but faces broad opposition to the Afghan mission among voters.

“Any additional numbers from any country are most appreciated,” Gates told reporters at a security conference in the southern German city of Munich.

“Maybe some will be able to help. It certainly will not be seen as a negative in our bilateral relations if some are not able to do more.”

Earlier, Germany’s Der Spiegel weekly said the government was planning to expand the number of soldiers it can send to Afghanistan by 1,000 to 4,500 and broaden their base of operations from the north to the west.

The magazine said Merkel planned to make the proposal at a NATO summit in April in order to deflect pressure from Washington to send German forces to the south.

But a government spokesman said: “There are no such considerations in the Chancellery.”

“IRRITATED” BY LETTER

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told ARD television he had been “irritated” by the tone of a letter Gates sent to Berlin and other allies last month asking them to do more in Afghanistan.

But he said he had been reassured after talks with the Pentagon chief in Munich.

Gates sent the letters after deciding to send 3,200 marines to Afghanistan in March and April.

Washington has pressed not only for more troops but also for more members of NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) to go to the violent south, where U.S., British, Dutch and Canadian troops are doing the bulk of the fighting.

Gates said the Iraq war had shown that it was important to have sufficient forces to fight insurgents. Washington sent an extra 30,000 troops to Iraq last year and violence there declined substantially.

“What we have seen in Iraq is that numbers do matter,” he said.

“As soon as the ISAF forces leave, sometimes the Taliban come back so we need to have enough troops there (so) that once these areas are cleared we can hold them so economic development and civil development can proceed,” he said.

A parliamentary mandate which expires in mid-October sets an upper limit of 3,500 German forces in Afghanistan.

German officials said the government was considering extending the mandate by 15 to 18 months instead of the usual one-year period in order to keep the issue out of the next federal election, due in the autumn of 2009.

The Afghanistan deployment is highly controversial within Germany, where many people remain averse to foreign military operations over 60 years after the end of World War Two.

Merkel’s awkward “grand coalition” of conservatives and Social Democrats (SPD) was able to renew the mandate last year, but only after a fierce debate in parliament and within some parts of the SPD.

(Reporting by Noah Barkin, Sabine Siebold, Kerstin Gehmlich, Erik Kirschbaum; Editing by Richard Meares)


    • Young Americans Documentary
    • Learn More About Pat
    • blogroll

      • A Soldier's Perspective
      • Ace Of Spades
      • American Soldier
      • Ann Coulter
      • Attack Machine
      • Bill Ardolino
      • Bill Roggio
      • Black Five
      • Blonde Sagacity
      • Breitbart
      • Chicagoray
      • Confederate Yankee
      • Day by Day Cartoon
      • Euphoric Reality
      • Flopping Aces
      • Free Republic
      • Frontier Web Design
      • Hot Air
      • Hugh Hewitt
      • Ian Schwartz
      • Instapundit
      • Jules Crittenden
      • Little Green Footballs
      • Matt Sanchez
      • Michael Fumento
      • Michael Yon
      • Michelle Malkin
      • Military.com
      • Missiles And Stilletos
      • Move America Forward
      • Mudville Gazette
      • Pass The Ammo
      • Protest Warrior
      • Roger L. Simon
      • Sportsman's Outfit
      • Stop The ACLU
      • TCOverride
      • The Belmont Club
      • The Big God Blog
      • The Crimson Blog
      • The Daily Gut
      • The Drudge Report
      • The PoliTicking Timebomb
      • The Pundit Review
      • Veteran's Affairs Documentary

5 Responses

  1. Paslode

    I think the German military is ready and willing, but considering a large percentage of Germans live off social entitlements and have become apathetic what can expect?

  2. franchie

    “Of the 42,000 NATO troops in Afghanistan, 16,000 are Americans and about 7,700 are British. DOD said last month it was sending 3,200 Marines there, to bolster a largely Army-driven mission. The Marines will be withdrawn by the end of the year, and Gates sent letters to member nations asking them to pick up the slack as the Marine deployment ends, a Pentagon spokesman said yesterday”

    http://thegate.nationaljournal.com/2008/02/whats_the_point_of_nato_anyway.php

    I can see the reason there

  3. GERMAN... AND PROUD OF IT

    Yaaawn…

  4. Darien3

    http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Analysis_Teatime_war_in_Afghanistan_999.html

  5. GERMAN... AND PROUD OF IT

    LOL

    “(The Germans) spend much of their time in an enormous base, complete with beer halls and nightclubs, in Mazar-i-Sharif, a 90-minute flight from the fighting,” the article said.

    In Berlin, the accusations have been vehemently refuted.

    “There is no ban on night flights,” a German armed forces spokesman told the online version of German news magazine Der Spiegel.

    Weather conditions could potentially limit the flight of German helicopters, the spokesman said, “but then it’s not just us — the others don’t fly either.” He added that no official complaint was filed from the Norwegians, and even the Scandinavians seem to doubt that things happened as described in the Sunday Times.

    Lt. Col. John Inge Oeglaend of the Norwegian Joint Headquarters told Spiegel Online he has heard nothing concrete of the incident, adding the mission was not abruptly ended. “I have no idea how the officer on the battlefield came to such a conclusion,” Oeglaend said.

    Other nations on previous occasions have praised German efforts in northern Afghanistan, where numerous civic reconstruction projects (schools, bridges, water infrastructure) have been realized in the past years; moreover, the German emergency medical installations in Afghanistan are among the alliance’s finest.

    However, the German military spokesman confirmed a safety restriction mentioned in the article; it’s true that Bundeswehr soldiers are not permitted to travel more than two hours away from hospitals with emergency surgery capabilities, he said.

Respond now.

alert Be respectful of others and their opinions. Inflammatory remarks and inane leftist drivel will be deleted. It ain’t about free speech, remember you’re in a private domain. My website, my prerogative.

alert If you can't handle using your real email address, don't bother posting a comment.

:mrgreen::neutral::twisted::arrow::shock::smile::???::cool::evil::grin::idea::oops::razz::roll::wink::cry::eek::lol::mad::sad::!::?::beer::beer: