Friday, April 23, 2010

Afghanistan War News Updates -- April 23, 2010



NATO Chief: Afghans Begin Control This Year -- Time Magazine

(TALLINN, Estonia) — NATO's top official says the alliance intends to start handing over responsibility for Afghanistan to the Afghan government this year.

The process is to be well under way by the summer of 2011, when President Barack Obama has said U.S. troops will begin coming home.

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen told a news conference Friday at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of allied foreign ministers — including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton — that they agreed on a general approach to transitioning to Afghan control.

Read more ....

More News On Afghanistan

NATO seals Afghan handover plan -- National Post
Clinton and NATO plan West's Afghan exit -- AP
Nato ministers consider Afghanistan pull-out plan -- BBC
NATO talks transfer of responsibility to Afghans -- Washington Post/Reuters
Allies Aim to Begin Handing Control to Afghans -- New York Times/AP
NATO to begin handing over Afghanistan to Afghan government -- USA Today/AP

Two NATO Troops, 5 Afghans Killed In Night Raid -- New York Times/Reuters
2 U.S. service members killed in Afghanistan -- L.A. Times
The Taliban Really Need A Win Here -- Strategy Page
NATO Chief Upbeat On Afghan War Effort -- Radio Free Europe
Assassination Shows Taliban’s Values, Petraeus Says -- US Department of Defense
Taleban rift ignites power struggle over who controls the insurgency -- Times Online
Afghan security forces implicated in killing of U.N. worker -- Washington Post
Afghan Taliban defectors reverting back to insurgency over failed Govt promises: Report -- One India
Afghan Deaths Threaten Support For U.S. Offensive -- NPR

Merkel Tries to Beat Back Opposition to Afghanistan -- New York Times
Merkel: Leaving Afghanistan could spark 2nd 9/11 -- UPI

Once-docile Afghan parliament stands up to Karzai and becomes an ally of U.S. -- Washington Post
US, NATO to discuss civilian aid to Afghanistan -- Yahoo News/AFP
U.S. military, diplomats at odds over how to resolve Kandahar's electricity woes -- Washington Post

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