guardian.co.uk,
Tuesday 17 April 2012 00.25 EDT
Australia expects to pull out
most of its troops from Afghanistan nearly a year
earlier than planned, the prime minister has announced, saying Australian
soldiers have nearly completed their mission to transfer security
responsibilities to Afghan forces in the decade-long war.
ulia Gillard cited security improvements and the death of Osama bin Laden
and many of al-Qaida's senior leaders
among the reasons behind the accelerated withdrawal, which will likely see most
troops home by the end of 2013. But one opposition politician suggested the
strategy was an attempt by Gillard to win over war-weary voters ahead of
federal elections.
"This is a war with a purpose. This is a war with an end,"
Gillard said in a speech to the Australian Strategic Policy Institute in Canberra . "We have a
strategy, a mission and a timeframe for achieving it."
Australia has 1,550 troops in Afghanistan, the largest force provided by
any country outside Nato. The soldiers' primary
objective has been training an Afghan National Army brigade to take
responsibility for security in Uruzgan province.
Gillard said she expected the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, to announce
in the next few months the transition of security responsibilities to Afghan
forces in Uruzgan and other provinces. Once that starts, it will take 12 to 18 months to complete. Based on that
timeframe, most of Australia 's
troops would be out of Afghanistan
by the end of 2013.
However, Gillard declined to give a specific date for the conclusion of the
withdrawal, saying the start of the process was dependent upon Karzai's
announcement.
"When this is complete, Australia 's
commitment in Afghanistan
will look very different to that which we have today," Gillard said.
"We will have completed our training and mentoring mission ... And the
majority of our troops will have returned home."
Australia will consider keeping some special forces soldiers in Afghanistan
beyond 2014, and will help fund the costs of Afghan security forces, Gillard
said. The prime minister said she and Karzai will sign a partnership agreement
at a meeting of Nato nations' leaders in Chicago
next month.
"Australia has an
enduring national interest in ensuring that Afghanistan does not again become a
safe haven for terrorists," Gillard said.
Australia's military deployment in Afghanistan maintains bipartisan
political support, but opinion polls show the popularity of the commitment
among the Australian public has plummeted amid the rising the death toll.
Thirty-two Australian soldiers have been killed in the conflict.
"It would be a shameful thing if, after nearly 12 years of deployment
in Afghanistan and the loss of more than 30 Australian lives, this mission was
foreshortened for reasons of domestic political convenience for the Labor party
rather than on the basis of the advice of the military commanders in the
field," opposition senator George Brandis told Sky News ahead of Gillard's
announcement.
But opposition leader Tony Abbott signalled support for the early
withdrawal, telling reporters in Melbourne
he had no reason to believe "it shouldn't be possible to finish the job
sooner rather than later".
Citing the deaths of Australian soldiers in the conflict,
Abbott said, "We want to make sure that sacrifice has been worthwhile and
that will happen if our troops come home soon with their mission
accomplished."
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