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NATO agrees to train Kosovo security forces
Published: 6/12/08, 1:49 PM EDT
By PAUL AMES
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - NATO nations agreed Thursday to broaden their 
peacekeeping mission in Kosovo to include training for the newly independent 
nation's security forces.

NATO troops will help train Kosovo's troops even though a minority of member 
nations, led by Spain, have not recognized Kosovo's declaration of independence 
from Serbia in February.

"With this decision, NATO will be able to assist Kosovo in building necessary, 
democratic security institutions," alliance Secretary General Jaap de Hoop 
Scheffer said at the meeting of NATO defense ministers.

"This Kosovo security force will be lightly armed, democratic and will focus 
initially on crisis response and civil emergency response," NATO spokesman 
James Appathurai said.

He told The Associated Press that the new training tasks could be launched 
under the current mandate of the 15,700-strong peacekeeping force without being 
vetoed by Russia. Moscow strongly supports Serbia's efforts to cling to Kosovo, 
a region it considers its religious and historic heartland.

Under the training plan, NATO will help disband the existing Kosovo Protection 
Corps made up mostly of former ethnic Albanian guerrillas who fought Serbia in 
the late 1990s. They will be replaced by a force of about 2,500 based on the 
paramilitary police deployed in many European nations.

Appathurai said the training is expected to start soon, and diplomats added 
that the aim was to have an initial force of 1,200 ready by year's end. 
Diplomats said the 600 or so Spanish troops serving in Kosovo would not take 
part in the training.

Although Appathurai stressed the planned multiethnic nature of the force, it 
was uncertain whether members of Kosovo's ethnic Serb minority would 
participate.

Meanwhile, Russia signaled its continued annoyance over Kosovo by calling for 
the dismissal of the top U.N. official in the new nation over plans for the 
European Union to replace the current U.N. police mission.

Russia contends the EU mission is illegal because it has not been approved by 
the U.N. Security Council. The U.N. has overseen Kosovo's administration since 
a 1999 NATO bombing campaign halted Serbia's crackdown on ethnic Albanian 
separatists.

NATO also has a problem with the EU's planned 2,200 police and justice 
law-and-order mission because Turkey objects to increased security cooperation 
between NATO and the European Union, which includes its rival, Cyprus.

Alliance officials are hoping a solution can be found that will allow NATO 
troops and the proposed EU police mission to work together.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates also was expected use the two-day NATO meeting 
to push allies to send more troops and police instructors to Afghanistan.

NATO's military mission in Afghanistan has more than doubled - to 51,000 - over 
the past two years, but commanders say it still lacks units for critical tasks 
such as air transport and intelligence. In particular, the United States wants 
allies to provide training teams to build up the Afghan police.

Police training has lagged behind efforts to forge an Afghan army, but 
commanders say an effective law enforcement force is key to stabilizing the 
country and winning support among the local population.

NATO defense ministers must also discuss how they will fill the gap left by the 
scheduled withdrawal of more than 3,000 Marines in October or November.

Gates sent in the Marines to reinforce allied troops fighting the Taliban in 
dangerous southern Afghanistan, but said they would only stay for seven months. 
Washington has said it will not send extra troops to replace them, leaving it 
up to allies to fill the void.

Part of the gap will be filled by about 700 French troops moving into eastern 
Afghanistan. They will free up U.S. forces for the south, but NATO will still 
need to find more.




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