WASHINGTON,
Aug 16 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The new Afghan government is
having difficulty getting on its feet because the international
community has been slow to make good on its promises of aid, U.S.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Thursday.
Rumsfeld
rebutted a growing perception that the government of President Hamid
Karzai is being undermined by a deteriorating security situation as
former warlords vie for power and influence.
"The
real problem, in my view, in Afghanistan is not security," he said.
"It is rather the challenge of bolstering the new government, the
new central government, and the fact that the international community is
not yet delivering the level of assistance that is needed to President
Karzai and his team."
Rumsfeld
acknowledged that violence persists in the region southeast of Kabul,
where U.S. forces have come under sporadic attack from fighters who move
back and forth across the border with Pakistan.
A
U.S. Army Green Beret (special forces) soldier died August 7 of wounds
suffered in an ambush in the area. Other U.S. troops have been wounded
in a flurry of recent attacks, prompting reports that Al-Qaeda and the
Taliban may be regrouping.
Rumsfeld
said the current phase of the war was aimed at preventing large
concentrations of Taliban and Al-Qaeda forces from re-gathering.
But
Army General Tommy Franks, the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan,
attending the news conference with Rumsfeld, told reporters that,
"it will only be a matter of time until in fact we have that in the
box that we want it in." but the need for U.S. troops to stay in
Afghanistan will remain, and may involve years in order to keep it from
reverting to "a terrorist training camp."
"We
didn't go in there to leave in a way that allows it to turn back into a
terrorist training camp, we went in there so that that would not
happen," said Rumsfeld. "And the end-state is when the Afghan
government has the capability to provide for its own security."
Anticipating
concerns over long-term U.S. troop deployment in the country, Franks
said, "We are engaged in military-to-military relationships in a
great many countries around the world so it does not surprise me that
someone would say, 'Oh gosh, the military's going to be in Afghanistan
for a long, long, time…Sure we will be."
Although
Franks made no specific prediction about how long U.S. forces would
remain there, when asked specifically whether he agreed with a U.S.
official's assessment that the U.S. military would stay in Afghanistan
for years, Franks replied, "I would agree with that."
Franks
said cooperation with the government of President Pervez Musharraf of
Pakistan "is very good today."
Elsewhere
in the country, Rumsfeld said the security situation was better than it
has been in a quarter of a century.
"But
the ministers don't have a structure under them so that they can
actually govern the entire country; nor do they have the budgets
necessary to conduct a government," he said.
"And
it simply takes time to get that infrastructure in place so that they
can actually function as a working government as opposed to a government
essentially in name," he added.
"They
need to get on their feet. To do that, they need resources," he
said.
"One
would expect a maturation of the government inside Afghanistan, one
would expect the training of the Afghan national army, border security
forces, police forces and so forth, to come along in accordance with a
plan," added Franks.
Despite
aid pledges by international donors totaling some five billion dollars,
Rumsfeld said the money has been slow in coming.
Less
than a third of the aid pledged for this year at the Tokyo donors
conference has been delivered, he said.
Other
aid is spread out over several years - much of it in the form of goods
and services rather than money, and often with strings attached that
prevent it from being used for security purposes, he said.
He
said the United States is also looking for another country to replace
Turkey as the lead country of the International Security Assistance
Force, the multinational force that has been policing the Afghan
capital. Turkey's six-month rotation in command of the 4,000-member
force ends in December.
In
a related development, the commander of the 82nd Airborne Division,
Major General John Vines, received orders to deploy with his
headquarters to Afghanistan to replace the 10th Mountain Division
command team, the military announced.
Rumsfeld
said the U.S.-led coalition's mission in Afghanistan would slowly shift
from combat operations to nation building efforts like building roads,
schools and hospitals.
"Truth
be told, the security situation in Afghanistan is reasonably good,"
Rumsfeld said. "Is the situation perfectly tidy? No ... But I
suspect it would be accurate to say that the security situation in
Afghanistan is the best it's been probably in close to a quarter of a
century."
There
are currently about 8,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan