Minister flies to Afghanistan after French deaths

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    KABUL: France’s defence minister is due to travel to Afghanistan Sunday hours after an attack that killed four French soldiers and an announcement that the nation would begin withdrawing troops in July.

     

    The attack by a burqa-clad Taliban suicide bomber was the first fatal  incident to hit the French since Francois Hollande took office last month and  the president said France would pay “national homage” to the dead.
     
    Speaking after the attack in eastern Afghanistan Hollande, who has promised  to bring combat troops home by the end of the year, announced that the  withdrawal would begin next month.
     
    He also asked Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian to head to Afghanistan on  Sunday.
     
    Five other troops were wounded in Saturday’s attack in the Nijrab district  of Kapisa province, where most of France’s 3,500 soldiers in the country are  stationed, officials said. Three were in critical condition.
     
    Hollande reiterated his vow to withdraw all combat troops by the end of  2012 — a year earlier than Paris initially planned, and two years before NATO  allies — saying the suicide attack had not changed his plans.
     
    “What happened does not change anything, it neither accelerates nor delays”  withdrawal plans, he said. While some have called for the pullout to be sped  up, “it is not possible to go faster,” he added.
     
    NATO allies have downplayed the effect of their early departure, saying  Afghan troops were ready to take over.
     
    And US General John Allen, the commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, has  said there will be no reduction in security in Kapisa.
     
    But the province, which controls part of the access to Kabul from Taliban  flashpoints on the Pakistani border, has proved a tough operation for the  French, troubled by turf wars between Islamist insurgents and drug dealers.
     
    And there are fears that Afghan forces will not be able to fill the  security vacuum.
     
    On a visit to Afghanistan last month, Hollande said 2,000 combat troops  would leave in a coordinated withdrawal this year, but vowed not to abandon the  country.
     
    Taliban militants claimed responsibility for Saturday’s suicide attack in a  text message sent to reporters.
     
    Interior ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi told AFP the attacker was on foot  and wearing a burqa.
     
    Saturday’s deaths were the first French fatalities in Afghanistan since  January 20, when an Afghan soldier fired on unarmed French trainers, killing  five and wounding 15. The death toll for French troops now stands at 87.
     
    There are about 130,000 NATO troops fighting alongside Afghan government  forces against the Taliban insurgency. A US-led coalition toppled the Taliban  regime in 2001 for sheltering Osama bin Laden after the 9/11 attacks.
     
    Analysts have expressed concern about NATO’s withdrawal, pointing out that  Afghan forces have a mixed record at best and questioning whether a security  vacuum will heighten violence if not hasten a return to civil war. -- AFP

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