Friday, November 7, 2008

Afghanistan War News Updates -- November 7, 2008

A look at recent civilian casualties in Afghanistan.
(Graphics/Reuters)

New Administration to Realign Priorities in Iraq, Afghanistan -- Wall Street Journal

WASHINGTON -- The election of Barack Obama will trigger a significant realignment of U.S. national-security priorities, with Afghanistan and Pakistan gaining in prominence as resources are redirected from Iraq.

U.S. policy in the two regions has been shaped by the Bush administration's decision to commit the bulk of the nation's military and financial resources to Iraq, where the ouster of Saddam Hussein set off a prolonged civil war, rather than to Afghanistan. The focus on Iraq left the Afghanistan mission chronically short of troops and money.

The incoming Obama administration sees the challenges differently. Aides said Mr. Obama is likely to deploy tens of thousands of additional U.S. troops to Afghanistan, where security conditions have worsened markedly in recent months and attacks by the Taliban and others have risen. They said Mr. Obama also would devote more attention to neighboring Pakistan, whose support is seen as crucial to defeating the Taliban and al Qaeda and stabilizing Afghanistan.

Read more ....

More News On Afghanistan

Coalition Forces Kill Insurgents Throughout Afghanistan -- AFPS
Death and No Progress Fighting the Taliban -- The Australian
Petraeus Visits Bagram, Discusses War in Afghanistan -- AFPS
Petraeus: Afghan tribes needed to fight militants -- AP
Afghan probe finds 37 killed in US air strike -- ABC News (Australia)
US official: Taliban sought wedding party deaths -- AP
Military Investigates Possible New Civilian Casualties in Afghanistan -- VOA
Coalition, Afghan Forces Investigate Possible Civilian Casualties -- AFPS
Barack Obama will want more European soldiers to fight in Afghanistan -- the Telegraph
Afghanistan bans street begging -- BBC News

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