NATO mulls Afghan dilemma as US draws down, attacks mount
 
 
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said Monday
that the military alliance is grappling with a dilemma over its future in
Afghanistan, as the United States starts pulling troops out while attacks by
the Taliban and extremist groups mount.
More than 17 years after taking the lead on
international security efforts in Afghanistan, NATO now has around 11,000
troops from dozens of nations there helping to train and advise the national
security forces. Most of the personnel are from Europe and other NATO partner
countries.
But the alliance relies heavily on the United States
armed forces for air support, transport and logistics. European allies would
struggle even to leave the country without U.S. help, and President Donald
Trump’s decision to pull almost half the U.S. troops out by mid-January leaves
NATO in a bind.
 “We face a
difficult dilemma. Whether to leave, and risk that Afghanistan becomes once
again a safe haven for international terrorists. Or stay, and risk a longer
mission, with renewed violence,” Stoltenberg told reporters on the eve of a
videoconference between NATO foreign ministers.
Under a peace deal between the United States and the
Taliban — without the involvement of other NATO allies or the Afghan government
- all foreign troops should leave Afghanistan by May 1 if security conditions
on the ground permit.
“Whatever path we choose, it is important that we do
so together, in a coordinated and deliberate way,” Stoltenberg said, on the eve
of a videoconference between NATO foreign ministers where the organization’s
most ambitious operation ever will be high on the agenda.
Trump’s unilateral decision to leave only 2,500 U.S.
troops with the mission had allied military planners scrambling, as they tried
to work out whether NATO could continue to operate in Kabul, and other major
cities. NATO diplomats say that for now they have enough “enablers” to get the
job done.
Afghan officials also fear that a rapid reduction in
American troops could strengthen the Taliban’s negotiating position.
NATO defense ministers are likely to make a final
decision about the future of the Resolute Support Mission in February, after
President-elect Joe Biden takes office. European diplomats expect the tone to
change under Biden, but probably not the U.S. intention to leave Afghanistan as
soon as possible.
The uncertainty comes amid a sharp rise in violence
this year and a surge of attacks by the Taliban against the beleaguered Afghan
security forces since the start of peace talks in September. Islamic State
militants have also struck this month, notably in a horrific attack on Kabul University
that killed 22 people, most of them students.
 “We have seen
over the last months and weeks several attacks,” Stoltenberg said. “Some are
conducted by Taliban, some attacks ISIS claimed responsibility for. But what we
know is that the Taliban is responsible for attacks and the level of violence
is far too high.”
Even U.S. Ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison
said: “We do not think the Taliban is keeping its word under the agreement. The
violence is too high, and the Afghan people and the Afghan soldiers have paid a
heavy price.”
But despite the surge in violence, and deep
uncertainty cause by the U.S. drawdown, the peace agreement appears to be an
opportunity too good for NATO to miss.
“We now see an historic opportunity for peace. It is
fragile, but it must be seized,” Stoltenberg said. “We see an unpredictable and
difficult military and political situation. But at least there are now talks.”
 
          
     
                                
 
 


