The “strategic defeat” of Al-Qaeda is “within reach”, Leon Panetta said yesterday, as he arrived on a surprise first visit to Afghanistan in his new role as US defence secretary.

Former CIA chief Panetta, who took office on July 1 to replace Robert Gates, arrived in Kabul for a trip to include talks with President Hamid Karzai over the transition of some Nato-held areas to Afghan control starting mid-July.

US President Barack Obama has announced that 10,000 US forces will leave Afghanistan this year and another 23,000 by the end of September in 2012, ahead of a full withdrawal of foreign forces in 2014.

Before his arrival, Panetta told travelling media that since the May night raid by US forces in Pakistan that killed Osama Bin Laden, 10-20 key Al-Qaeda targets had been identified between Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and North Africa.

“If we can go after them, I think we really can strategically defeat Al-Qaeda,” said Panetta, who leads the Pentagon after two years as head of the CIA.

“Obviously we made an important start with that with getting rid of bin Laden. I was convinced in my prior capacity and I’m convinced in this capacity that we’re within reach of strategically defeating Al-Qaeda.”

“Now is the moment, following what happened with Bin Laden, to put maximum pressure on them because I do believe that if we continue this effort that we can really cripple Al-Qaeda,” he said.

Panetta also pushed Pakistan to do more to help the fight against Al-Qaeda, amid dismal relations between the US and its uneasy ally in the war on terror.

In particular the US wanted to see Pakistan go after Al-Qaeda’s new chief Ayman al-Zawahiri, who he said is likely living in the country’s northwestern tribal areas.

“He’s one of those we would like to see the Pakistanis target,” said Panetta.

“We have to continue to emphasise with the Pakistanis that in the end it’s in their interest to be able to go after these targets as well. They’ve given us some cooperation, they’re going after some of these targets, we’ve got to continue to push them to do that.”

US-led coalition forces have been fighting a Taliban-led insurgency in Afghanistan since their invasion in late 2001 in the wake of the September 11 attacks orchestrated by Bin Laden.

Panetta said that the near 10-year war in Afghanistan that has led to the deaths of 1,658 US troops so far and costs the US about $10 billion every month had been successful in defeating part of the Islamist network.

“We’ve been able to disrupt, dismantle Al-Qaeda. We’ve been able to in many ways return Afghanistan to itself instead of having the Taliban run that country,” he said.

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