Europe reluctant to make firm Afghan troop pledges

Britain offers more troops

European leaders were quick to offer verbal support yesterday to US President Barack Obama's Afghanistan strategy, but in less of a hurry to commit new troops to an uncertain and deadly military campaign.

Faithful US ally Britain was first off the mark, promising to send 500 extra soldiers even before Mr Obama made his long-awaited policy speech on Tuesday in which he said he would send 30,000 more American troops.

Mr Obama said the reinforcements were necessary to speed up the battle against Taliban insurgents, secure key towns and train Afghan security forces so they could take over and clear the way for the United States to begin to reduce forces in 18 months.

The US goal is to prevent Al Qaeda militants allied with the Taliban from using the mountainous country as a base for attacks on the West and its allies in the Middle East.

The new deployment will take the number of American troops in the war zone to 98,000, while Britain, the number two contributor, will boost its contingent to about 10,000.

US officials have said Washington is seeking 5,000 to 7,000 more troops from allies. Nato Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he expected non-US participants in the Nato-led Afghan mission to provide at least 5,000 extra troops.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said yesterday Britain would "play its full part in persuading other countries to offer troops to the Afghanistan campaign".

But despite the drumbeat from London, the response from continental Europe was cautious as leaders sought to give Mr Obama positive signals while placating their own voters, who are increasingly sceptical of the Afghan war.

Germany, the third-biggest contributor with 4,400 troops in Afghanistan, signalled that it stood ready to do more police training but could not commit more troops before a strategy review early next year.

"(Obama) also took his time to work out the speech and his strategy and we will take our own time to assess what he said and discuss this with our allies," Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy called Mr Obama's speech "courageous, determined and lucid" and said France would "look at its contribution to international strategy, giving priority to the training of Afghan security forces".

France, the fourth-biggest contributor with 3,750 soldiers in the region, had said days earlier it would not dispatch any more forces, so Mr Sarkozy's statement marked a change of tone.

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