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Afghan graduates first post-Taliban army officers

by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Jan 25, 2009
Afghanistan graduated Sunday its first military officers in more than a decade from an elite academy modelled on West Point in the United States, in a major step in building a post-Taliban army.

President Hamid Karzai presented the 84 new second lieutenants with the university-level certificates, lauding them as the "new hope" in a country battered by 30 years of war and dependent on foreign troops for its security.

"This is an extremely important step towards a peaceful and self-reliant Afghanistan," he told the soldiers, who completed four years of study that included contributions from West Point and its British equivalent, Sandhurst.

After the collapse of the communist regime in the early 1990s, the Afghan army -- built under the Soviet occupation -- had 400 military aircraft and nearly 4,000 tanks and armoured carriers, Karzai said.

There were also at least 200,000 soldiers, although Karzai did not give a number.

But the civil war that followed shredded the armed forces and they remained in tatters under the 1996-2001 Taliban regime that harboured Al-Qaeda.

A US-led invasion in 2001 removed the Taliban, after which several nations joined to help build new Afghan forces, sending their troops to the country to fight an extremist insurgency until the Afghans could take over.

The top international military commander in Afghanistan, US General David McKiernan, told the young graduates that they could count on international help in the battle against the Taliban-led insurgency.

"You will not be alone in this fight," McKiernan said.

Besides having the most international troops in Afghanistan, the United States leads the drive to train and equip the fledgling Afghan forces, sending over thousands of guns and armoured vehicles and some aircraft.

Karzai said he had asked the United States and other partners for more equipment.

"We will provide what support we can (but) this is your country," McKiernan said. "You must seize the opportunity to lead your men. You... train harder and better and take the fight to a hidden and often coward enemy," he said.

The Afghan National Army numbers roughly 80,000 men, with plans for its expansion to 134,000 by 2012, a priority in efforts to beat the Taliban insurgency that last year was at its most intense yet.

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Israel will defend army against war charges: Olmert
Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 25, 2009
Israel will grant legal protection for soldiers who fought in the three-week war in the Gaza Strip, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said on Sunday amid accusations of war crimes.







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