Alla inlägg under december 2014

Av loren adams - 11 december 2014 13:49

  SANGIHE, Indonesia  

- A Pacific Partnership joint-veterinarian team has helped local villagers in Najah by treating their animals for parasites and rabies.

The Veterinary Civic Action Project (VETCAP) was held to educate local residents and help reduce the risk of rabies in the area.Rabies vaccinations have the longest affect and the most impact on the area.

Combined with knowledge given to the veterinarians and residents, it is likely that it will be controlled.

The VETCAP started with a subject matter expert exchange, where local residents were educated on rabies and swine diseases, followed by cattle, goat and dog vaccinations.

Av loren adams - 11 december 2014 10:34

 NORTH SULAWESI, Indonesia Commander U.S 7th Fleet – The US Army Veterinary Officer + staff  sort through a shipment of veterinary supplies while aboard the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH-19). The combined team of volunteer and military veterinary specialists prepared supplies for veterinary civic action projects in the Philippines, Vietnam and Cambodia as part of Pacific Partnership. Then in its seventh year, Pacific Partnership is an annual U.S Pacific Fleet humanitarian and civic assistance mission that brings together U.S military personnel, host and partner nations, non-government organizations and international agencies to build stronger relationships and develop disaster response capabilities throughout the Asia-Pacific region. (Photo by Camelia Montoy)  

Av loren adams - 8 december 2014 16:03

  Before Picture! LTC Loren Adams, SPC Adam Chitwood, CW2 Bryan L Davis, SGT William J Atkisson, CPT Pamela Johnson, SGT Antonio Alfaro, SPC Manda Kaye Templeton, SPC Casandra Sunshine Skaife, SPC James Becvar
 
 
 
 
 

Av loren adams - 8 december 2014 11:01

  The U.S decided to keep the additional forces in the country temporarily because planned troop commitments by U.S allies for a NATO train-and-assist mission starting in January have been slow to materialize. NATO countries were supposed to contribute about 2,200 troops to the residual force, for a total of about 12,000.

Hagel, who arrived in Kabul on a previously unannounced trip one day after Obama announced he would nominate Ashton Carter to succeed him, was making his fourth and final trip as Defense secretary to Afghanistan. He was brimming with optimism about the prospects for stability, saying he believes the Afghans will stifle the recent surge in Taliban attacks in Kabul.

The Taliban, Islamists who ruled the country from 1996 until ousted by U.S.-led forces in 2001, regrouped substantially after the U.S shifted its military focus to Iraq in 2003. They are now trying to destabilize Ghani's new government.

Hagel said they have failed in that effort so far and are not likely to succeed.

"I have confidence in the Afghan security forces that they will continue to meet these challenges," he said.

However, he said it's not surprising the Taliban are able to mount significant attacks in the capital.

"The Taliban are going to continue to have pockets of resurgence, and it's predictable that they would do everything they possibly could to disrupt" the new government.

In September, the United States and Afghanistan signed a long-delayed security agreement to allow 9,800 troops to remain past the end of this year. U.S and Afghan officials had agreed on terms of the accord over a year earlier, but then-Afghan president Hamid Karzai refused to sign, complaining that U.S airstrikes had killed Afghan civilians and that the U.S had made overtures to the Taliban.

Last month, President Obama approved a plan to let U.S troops protect themselves and allies in Afghanistan. The plan allows airstrikes to aid U.S., allied and Afghan troops, but was not intended to allow offensive operations against the Taliban.

The changes reflect a more cooperative role with the new government in Kabul; Ghani enjoys a stronger relationship with the U.S than Karzai did.

The United States had a peak of about 100,000 troops in Afghanistan in 2010 and 2011, according to the Pentagon. The U.S combat mission officially ends Dec. 31, and U.S troops are to be removed entirely by 2017.

 

U.S Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel is greeted after arriving Dec. 6 in Kabul.(Photo: Mark Wilson, AP)

Av loren adams - 8 december 2014 08:06

  BERLIN, Dec 5 (Reuters) - Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged on Friday to support Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and his new unity government after NATO combat troops withdraw from the country at the end of more than a decade of fighting Islamist insurgents.

Afghanistan's 350,000-strong military and police forces have taken over security in most of the country, facing off against the Taliban in their first real test since the militant Islamists were ousted from power in 2001 by U.S.-led forces.

The United States and its allies intend to keep about 12,000 troops in Afghanistan for counter-terrorism and training of local personnel after combat forces formally withdraw this year.

Merkel told a joint news conference with Ghani in Berlin that Germany would also support Afghanistan in the longer term by training security forces and providing development aid.

"Germany has a responsibility, especially for security in northern Afghanistan," Merkel said, adding that bilateral economic ties were also becoming more important.

The German parliament voted earlier on Friday to keep 850 soldiers in Afghanistan in 2015 to train local forces, making Germany one of the biggest contributors after the United States.

It also agreed to support Kabul with annual development aid worth 430 million euros ($529 million), more than any other country.

As part of the NATO-led mission in Afghanistan, Germany has had up to 5,000 soldiers stationed in the country. Some 55 German soldiers have being killed in combat.

Civilian and military deaths have risen in 2014, the bloodiest year since the war against Taliban militants began.

Afghanistan is in talks with neighbouring countries including China on a regional agreement on peace and security, Ghani said.

"That is all at an early stage. We are working on a detailed plan," he added.

Last month Reuters reported exclusively that China had proposed setting up a forum to restart stalled peace talks between Afghanistan and Taliban insurgents.

Documents seen by Reuters show that China put forward a proposal for a "peace and reconciliation forum" that Afghan officials said would gather representatives from Afghanistan, Pakistan, China and the Taliban command.

Av loren adams - 3 december 2014 09:31

 


Av loren adams - 3 december 2014 08:28

  According to reports, President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani has tacitly resumed backdoor diplomacy with the Taliban group in a bid to revive peace process amid growing instability and violence across the country.

The efforts by President Ghani to revive peace talks with the Taliban group comes almost one and half year after negotiations were suspended by the former President Hamid Karzai’s administration.

Karzai boycotted the process following the opening of the Taliban political office in the absence of Afghan government officials in Qatar last year.

In the meantime, sources privy to the development have said President Ghani has resumed negotiations with the Taliban group with an aim to the Afghan Taliban into the country’s political equation.

According to Pakistani newspaper – The Express Tribune, the negotiations have started under UN supervision.

The Pakistani officials quoted by the newspaper have said that Islamabad has assured the Afghan government and the Taliban that it would help revive the stalled peace process.

 
Av loren adams - 3 december 2014 06:41


  Afghan National Army (ANA) soldiers take part in a training exercise at a military base in Kabul Nov. 23, 2014.


LONDON—Afghanistan’s president and chief executive are at NATO headquarters in Brussels to formalize their country’s new relationship with the alliance, which will end its more than 10-year combat mission in Afghanistan at the end of this month.

The two Afghan leaders walked into NATO headquarters Monday at dusk, greeted by new Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg. Tuesday, they will meet with the foreign ministers of the 28 NATO member states, and senior officials of dozens of partner nations that have sent troops to Afghanistan over the years.

From January first, Afghan forces will have full responsibility for security and combat throughout the country, and NATO troops will work only as advisers and trainers. Plans for that were finalized on Sunday, when Afghan President Ashraf Ghani signed agreements with NATO and the United States.

Stoltenberg welcomed the move, saying, “We now have in place what we need to move forward with our new mission - Resolute Support - to train, advise and assist the Afghan national security forces.”

NATO support

Earlier, Stoltenberg acknowledged violence will continue in Afghanistan, but said he is confident Afghan forces can handle the situation, with NATO support.

Ghani thanked NATO for its help, and paid tribute to the thousands of NATO troops killed and wounded in Afghanistan. Referring to the September 11 attacks in the United States in 2001, he said the relationship was “compelled by tragedy, cemented by sacrifices,” and is now moving to a new phase.

“Afghanistan is in the front line of struggle. But that struggle has meant, and the NATO commitment to that struggle has meant, that Europe and North America have been safe,” said Ghani.

Mission approval

A long dispute over the country’s presidential election threatened to derail the plan, but a U.S.-mediation effort convinced two bitter rivals to share power. In Brussels, the losing candidate -- now Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah - stood with Ghani and made an optimistic prediction.

“With the new spirit of cooperation that you see from the national unity government, the scope for changing the environment, not only for Afghanistan, but for the region as well as for the world peace, is much greater than we can imagine,” said Abdullah.

 

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