[Peace-discuss] "Exit strategy" auf Deutsch

C. G. Estabrook galliher at illinois.edu
Mon Aug 24 20:19:45 CDT 2009


	German candidates clash over Afghanistan exit
	Mon, 24 Aug 2009 13:52:15 GMT

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has snubbed a promise by her rival in the 
upcoming elections to withdraw troops from Afghanistan, saying the mission there 
continues until its goals are met.

Merkel said she would bring home the Bundeswehr, Germany's military forces, "as 
soon as possible" but only after their mission was complete.

“We have a goal, and that is self-sustaining security for Afghanistan,” Merkel 
told public television Sunday.

Her comments came a day after Vice-Chancellor and Foreign Minister Frank-Walter 
Steinmeir told Spiegel in an interview that if victorious, his center-left 
Social Democratic Party would move to negotiate a "concrete schedule" for 
gradually brining the soldiers home.

Steinmeier's Social Democrats Party (SPD) is currently sharing power in a 
fragile grand coalition with Merkel's Christian Democrats Party (CDU).

By the end of this year, the parliamentary mandate which allows Germany to 
contribute up to 4,500 troops to the NATO mission in Afghanistan expires. It 
must be renewed if the troops are to remain in the country.

The rising death toll there, however, has made the mission increasingly 
unpopular in Germany.

The war in Afghanistan looks no closer to defeating the Taliban militancy that 
has raged in the country since the fall of the Taliban regime following the 2001 
US-led invasion.

US Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff, the highest ranking officer in the US Army, 
told CNN on Sunday that the situation in Afghanistan was “deteriorating” and 
that the insurgents had grown more “sophisticated” in the past eight years.

Germany's parliamentary elections are set to take place on September 27.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=104370&sectionid=351020604


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