Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
NATO in Afghanistan: '2015 and beyond'
NATO in Afghanistan: '2015 and beyond'
Mar 14, 2026 1:54 AM

  Having dispensed of any pretense that the military is going to start withdrawing in July, NATO officials are now painting for the public a picture of what the Afghan War is going to look like in 2015, 14 years after the occupation began.

  The answer, of course, is that so far as anyone in NATO is concerned the war in 2015 will look much the same as the war in 2010, with the pretense of more Afghan “leadership.” NATO will retain leadership in parts of the nation, however, in 2015 and beyond.

  The answers came from Mark Sedwill, NATO’s top civilian official in Afghanistan. Sedwell had expressed ‘hope’, at the start of 2010, that this year would be the “turning point” for the war. It may well have been, from a death toll perspective, but not in the good way like you’d hope.

  Now Sedwell is hoping for a turning point in 2014, where NATO can finally, credibly claim some measure of Afghan government leadership in the war effort. Even this, he admits, is not guaranteed, and he continues to predict more violence going forward.

  Most NATO officials are now openly talking about the end of 2014 as a “transition” date, which is expected to be formally cemented in this weekend’s Lisbon Summit. The usually unspoken part of this is that 2014 is a best case scenario, and even that doesn’t necessarily involve any real withdrawal of forces or anything close to an exit strategy.

  Sedwell is being unusually honest among officials in so comfortably talking about the grim state NATO “hopes” the war will be in another 4-5 years from now. Even this, bad as it is, rests on NATO’s always overly optimistic viewpoint, but at least gives us a glimpse of how little consideration is being given for an end of the war.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  NATO troops from Georgia sleep on a bench while waiting for a flight at Camp Bastion in southern Afghanistan's Helmand province, November 16, 2010.

  Source: Antiwar.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
Millions of aborted girls imbalance India
  Modern medical technology - specifically ultrasounds for determining the baby's sex - coupled with Indian ancient social values which give preference to boys, mean that hundreds of thousands of girls are never being born.   There were only 914 girls for every 1,000 boys under the age of six in India,...
US Congress to vote on indefinite detention
  While it's known that the US has used indefinite detention of suspects in its "war on terror", the House and Senate are just a vote away from making the same treatment legal for US citizens apprehended within the US.   The Senate already passed one version of the 2012 National Defense...
Blaming Muslims - yet again
  With at least 92 people dead and several injured, the brutality of Friday's attacks in Norway left the country reeling.   But who to blame for the bomb blast that tore through Oslo's government district and the shooting spree that left scores of teenagers dead at a youth summer camp in...
UN: Somalia is 'worst humanitarian disaster'
  The head of the United Nations refugee agency has described the situation in drought-hit Somalia as the "worst humanitarian disaster" in the world, after meeting with those affected at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya.   The camp, located in the northeast and the world's largest in the world, is overflowing...
Kuwaiti families in legal limbo at Guantanamo
  Fatimah Al Kandari has not seen her son Fayiz Al Kandari in more than 10 years, but her thoughts are possessed by him. She sees Fayiz in every face. She thinks she hears him at times speaking to her. There is no room for anything else in Fatimah Al Kandari's...
India: Malnutrition becomes 'national shame'
  Geeta, a 27-year-old mother of three, living on the outskirts of the national capital region looks vacant at the queries of malnourishment. For her, gathering cereals for the two square meals of her family is a luxury. Her four-year-old daughter, the youngest of her children, looks too tiny for her...
Islamophobia, Zionism and the Norway massacre
  In a Washington Post op-ed last week, Abraham Foxman, the National Director of the Anti Defamation League, likened the hateful ideology that inspired Anders Behring Breivik to massacre 77 innocent people in Norway to the "deadly" anti-Semitism that infected Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries.   This is a parallel...
Veto power at the UN Security Council
  The United Nations Security Council has 15 members, but only its five permanent members - the United States, the United Kingdom, France, China and Russia - hold the power to impose a veto on the council's resolutions.   In the most recent example of this power being exercised, Russia and China...
Ignoring court, Israeli officials bulldoze Palestinian homes
  It was a dark and stormy night in the village of Tha’lah. Israeli “civil administration” officials arrive at the hut of a local shepherd, ordering the entire family to vacate their house within one minute.   But wait, the owner has official documentation from the Israeli High Court of Justice, an...
Israel as world's first bunker state
  By Jonathan Cook   The wheel is turning full circle. Last week the Israeli parliament updated a 59-year-old law originally intended to prevent hundreds of thousands of Palestinian refugees from returning to the homes and lands from which they had been expelled as Israel was established.   The purpose of the draconian...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved