http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hGi9PjOhnvbgr7uyCernVbUKlFJAD9C1I1480


Associated Press
November 17, 2009


Slovakia to add 250 NATO troops to Afghan mission
By RAPHAEL G. SATTER


LONDON: Slovakia pledged about 250 extra soldiers Tuesday to the NATO-led force 
in Afghanistan, the first of what British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said 
would be a series of international reinforcements.

The central European country will double the size of its 246-strong contingent 
in Afghanistan, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said in a joint statement 
with Brown following talks in the British capital.

Brown, who has said he is lobbying allies in Europe and elsewhere for as many 
as 5,000 extra soldiers, said more such announcements were on their way.

"We will be approaching other countries and I believe that, including Britain, 
maybe 10 countries will be prepared to give extra support in Afghanistan," he 
said.

NATO's Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, in the Scottish city of 
Edinburgh on Tuesday for an address to the group's parliamentary assembly, has 
so far steered clear of saying how many extra reinforcements the trans-Atlantic 
alliance was willing to send to Afghanistan.

He told delegates Tuesday that NATO was leaning toward adopting a new 
counterinsurgency strategy that would include a substantial number of extra 
troops — but he did not elaborate.
....
Britain has 9,000 troops in Afghanistan, the largest international contingent 
after America's 68,000 troops, but public support for the conflict has fallen 
as casualties have risen.

Slovakia's modest new commitment was welcomed by Brown, who has been appealing 
to the 43 other nations involved in Afghanistan's International Security 
Assistance Force to help share the burden of the fighting.
....
Britain's NATO allies have been under pressure to move their troops away from 
relatively safe parts of Afghanistan to more dangerous areas where U.S. and 
U.K. forces are grappling with Taliban insurgents.
....
Slovakia's pledge also comes as President Barack Obama's administration nears a 
decision on whether or by how much to boost the number of American troops 
there. In all, the international force in Afghanistan is currently about 
100,000 strong.

Fico was in London for a meeting with Brown on Tuesday — the 20th anniversary 
of the Velvet Revolution in what was then known as Czechoslovakia.

Associated Press Writer Karel Janicek in Prague contributed to this report.
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