NATO holds talks on global missions
Nov 24, 2009 at 14:50Spokesman Col. Greg Julian said the staff-level meeting was focused on generating contributions for NATO's force in Kosovo, its anti-piracy patrols off Somalia, a naval mission in the Mediterranean, and the alliance's various headquarters.
The meeting at the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe in Mons, a town in southern Belgium, also was supposed to discuss reinforcements for Afghanistan. But that part was postponed after Washington delayed its decision on a request by top U.S. and NATO war commander Gen. Stanley McChrystal for tens of thousands of new troops there.
A separate conference on NATO forces in Afghanistan has tentatively been scheduled for Dec. 7 at the Supreme Headquarters, after Obama's expected announcement and following a meeting of NATO foreign minister on Dec. 3-4.
The alliance holds regular biannual conferences where allies pledge troops, equipment and other resources to fulfill the requirements of NATO missions abroad. NATO has about 90,000 service members deployed abroad — including 12,500 in Kosovo and 71,000 in Afghanistan — and new units are regularly rotated in as replacements for troops leaving a mission.
Several contributing countries already have indicated they would send additional troops to the NATO-led force in Afghanistan. Britain has said it may deploy 500 more soldiers, and Slovakia will double its 245-strong contingent. Georgia, a nation that is not part of NATO, will add about 170 soldiers and will later dispatch a 700-member infantry battalion to Helmand province.
But most allies have declined to make any commitments, saying they would decide after an international conference on Afghanistan sometime next year.