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<title>Center for Strategic Decision Research, Peter Struck, Michele Alliot-Marie, General George Joulwan, SACEUR, General James L. Jones, SHAPE, NATO, EU, BDLI, ILA, EADS, Northrop Grumman, Under Secretary Michael Wynne, Assistant Secretary Linton Wells, Ambassador William Burns, NATO Military Committee Chairman General Harald Kujat, General Dynamics, Boeing, Global Security Terrorism, Iraq, Afghanistan, Rainer Hertrich, David Stafford</title>
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        <td width="66" height="68"><p><img src="../2004book/logo-kevin-web.jpg" width="60" height="66"></p>        </td>
        <td width="538"><div align="center"><span class="style5">22nd International Workshop on Global Security<br>
<em>Chantilly/Paris, 10-12 June 2005 </em><br>
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      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style18"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="preface.htm">Preface</a></span></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 1 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><a href="alliotmarie.htm">French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie (English version) </a><span class="style217"><strong></strong></span><span class="style217"><strong><a href="alliotmarie-french.htm">French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie (French version) </a><a href="reid.htm">UK Defense Minister John Reid</a></strong></span><span class="style217"><strong><a href="graham.htm">Canadian Defense Minister Bill Graham </a></strong></span><span class="style219"><a href="weissingerbaylon.htm">Workshop Chairman Dr. Roger Weissinger-Baylon </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="liska.htm">Slovak Defense Minister Juraj Liska </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="erjavec.htm">Slovenian Defense Minister Karl Erjavec </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="svinarov.htm">Bulgarian Defense Minister Nikolay Svinarov </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="kujat.htm">NATO Military Committee Chair Gen Harald Kujat </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="koenig.htm">Acting US Ambassador to NATO John Koenig </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="schuwirth.htm">SHAPE Chief of Staff Gen Rainer Schuwirth </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="back.htm">Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum Cmdr Gen Gerhard Back </a></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 2 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"><a href="perrindebrichambaut.htm">French MOD Dir for Strat Affairs Amb Marc Perrin de Brichambaut </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="dipaola.htm">Italian Chief of Defense Adm Giampaolo Di Paola </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="naumann.htm">fmr German Chief of Defense Gen  Klaus Naumann </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="perruche.htm">EU Military Staff Director Gen Jean-Paul Perruche </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="klein.htm">US Assist to Secretary of Defense Dale Klein </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="gergorin.htm">EADS Exec Vice President Jean-Louis Gergorin </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="george.htm">UK Parliament Member Bruce George </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="ranque.htm">Thales Chairman &amp; CEO Denis Ranque</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="tarasyuk.htm">Ukranian Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="fasslabend.htm">Austrian Natl Assembly Member Minister Werner Fasslabend</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="pickering.htm">Boeing Sr Vice President Amb Thomas Pickering</a></span><a href="rooseveltinstitution.htm">Roosevelt Institution </a></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 3 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="auroy.htm">French MOD DGA Force Systems &amp; Cooperation Director Patrick Auroy </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="lind.htm">Swedish Natl Armaments Director Jan-Olof Lind </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="weise.htm">German Armaments Dir Hans-Heinrich Weise </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="volkman.htm">US Under Secretary of Defense Office Intl Coop Director Alfred Volkman </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="stanhope.htm">Dep Supreme Allied Cmdr Transformation Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="lahoud.htm">MBDA President &amp; CEO Marwan Lahoud </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="courtot.htm">SAFRAN Sr Vice President Francois Courtot </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="bertolone.htm">Alenia Aeronautica CEO Giovanni Bertolone </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="harris.htm">Lockheed Martin President Scott Harris </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="schneider.htm">Northrop Grumman President Kent Schneider </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="wells.htm">US Assist Secretary of Defense Linton Wells </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="vice.htm">Northrop Grumman Vice President Thomas Vice</a></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 4 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="novotny.htm">Czech Ambassador to India Jaromir Novotny </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="rinkevics.htm">Latvian MOD State Secretary Edgars Rinkevics</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="plangu.htm">Romanian MOD State Secretary for Policy Ion Mircea Plangu </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="kouts.htm">Estonian Defense Forces Cmdr Adm Tarmo Kouts </a></span><br>
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        <h1 align="center" class="style29">Kabul and Beyond<br>
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              <td width="287"><div align="center"><span class="style30">General Gerhard W. Back<br>
  Commander, <br>
  Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum</span></div></td>
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        <p class="style21 style21">Thank you for allowing me this  opportunity to speak to you. What I would like to do is provide you with a  perspective on the NATO mission in Afghanistan&mdash;what we are doing and  what it means to the NATO Alliance.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30 style31"><strong>RESTRUCTURING THE ALLIANCE&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Let me set the scene.  NATO&rsquo;s circumstances have undergone dramatic changes in the last 15 years. We  have moved from defending Europe to acting as a  global force for good in a world in which failed or fragile states and  non-state actors combine to generate a complex and far less predictable  strategic landscape. NATO has had to remodel around this new philosophy; the Alliance of today needs  to be flexible and dynamic both in the planning and the conducting of  operations.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">The transformation process  has promoted a radical approach to altering the way the Alliance is structured, organized, and run.  Nowhere has change been more dramatic than in the NATO Operational Command  Structure, where the number of headquarters has been reduced from 65 to just 11  and those 11 have been made leaner and more efficient. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Joint Force Command Brunssum  is one of two headquarters that provide the backbone of the operational command  structure. My HQ is designed to support NATO&rsquo;s level of ambition by providing  deployable joint command and control capabilities required for operations  either by a Combined Joint Task Force or the NATO Response Force, or NRF. The  NRF has been embraced as the core of NATO&rsquo;s ability to react rapidly to meet a  range of missions. &nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30"><strong>JOINT FORCE COMMAND BRUNSSUM&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Not surprisingly, operations  are my top priority; my headquarters has been in command of the ISAF operation  in Afghanistan  since August 2003. This work consumes the main effort of the majority of my  staff, but we are also fully engaged with the development of deployable forces.  This effort involves frequent participation in exercises&mdash;those of other  commands as well as our own&mdash;at both the tactical and the operational levels.  Therefore another high priority is to train our own deployable HQ staff so that  it is able to command the NRF during our periods of responsibility, the next of  which begins in mid 2006. We are already planning for this one-year commitment,  which includes a major live exercise to be conducted in Cape Verde to  bring the NRF to full operational capability. We also have additional  responsibilities, including advancing military cooperation with partner  nations.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30"><strong>OPERATIONS IN AFGHANISTAN&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Now that the scene is set,  let me fast-forward to the present and the reality of life for NATO and its  number one operational priority in Afghanistan. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Consider this: &nbsp;Less  than four years ago, most Afghan people were firmly under the control of  ruthless hardliners in a country riven by conflict. Young girls could not go to  school. Women were routinely beaten for simply showing their ankles in public.  Young men were forcibly recruited to fight on behalf of the Taliban. A  democratically elected government, a free exchange of ideas among peoples, and  freedom of expression in the media all were inconceivable.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">How  things have changed: &nbsp;On October 9, 2004, despite threats and intimidation  by remnants of the hardliners, eight million Afghan citizens cast a vote for  their future and democratically elected a president. This was a first in Afghan  history, and it proved to be a monumental success. Forty percent of voters were  women, an astounding rate that clearly showcased their courage and  determination. As President Karzai said during his inaugural speech, &ldquo;Every  vote cast, whether for me or another candidate, was cast for Afghanistan.&rdquo;  &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Much of the credit for this  astounding progress goes to the U.S.-led coalition that has carried out a  determined campaign for more than three years to eliminate the extremist forces  that plunged Afghanistan  into chaos and created a fertile breeding ground for terrorism. For the past  two years, NATO has also become an active and increasingly more important  player. In August of 2003, NATO&rsquo;s International Security Assistance Force, or  ISAF, started its operations in the capital of Kabul. In July 2004, as a first step towards  gradually expanding its role, NATO took over responsibility for the northern provinces and  the associated Provincial Reconstruction Teams, or PRTs. Then at the end of May  2005, the ISAF activated a further stage of expansion, taking over the west of  the country from the coalition. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">The ISAF&rsquo;s mission is truly  cross-Alliance and multinational, demonstrating NATO&rsquo;s commitment to global  security by engaging nations outside the organization. Today ISAF consists of  some 9,000 troops from all 26 member-nations as well as 10 non-NATO  countries.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30"><strong>PROVINCIAL RECONSTRUCTION TEAMS&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">With the tactical command in  theater rotating every six months, my headquarters, through its responsibility  for longer-term planning, training, and other activities, provides continuity  and stability at the operational level. The Provincial Reconstruction Teams are  our active ingredient for assisting the Afghan government in extending its  influence and facilitating development and reconstruction.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">We currently have seven PRTs,  with two more to follow in July of 2005, and two forward support bases in the  north and west of the country. Although there have been critics of the PRT  concept, I am absolutely certain that they provide the most viable and economic  way for NATO to make a difference in the regions. I believe that it is  particularly important that the PRTs are considered by the Afghans to be  providing added value, engaging in dialogue with local political leaders,  reducing local tensions, and helping to create the necessary security  conditions to allow economic development. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">The PRT structure enables  lead nations that are responsible for working with the Afghan government to  identify priorities and to fund key development projects; the structure also  provides the opportunity for others to be involved. For example, Lithuania,  which has been a member of NATO for just over a year, has volunteered to lead a  PRT at the very difficult location of Chagcharan in Ghor province.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30"><strong>CURRENT AND FUTURE SECURITY ISSUES&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Our next challenge will be to  assist the Afghans in ensuring security for the National Assembly and Provincial Council Elections,  which are scheduled for September of 2005. NATO will again bolster security by providing additional  forces, both to increase our presence and to provide additional security cover.  I have no doubt about the test that these elections present&mdash;they are  significantly more complex than the presidential elections and are already  generating local tensions. However, they are a precursor to success, and they  need to happen in a timely fashion to ensure that the Karzai administration is  not undermined.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">In parallel with this  challenge, we also need to square up to the medium-term aim of taking on  responsibility for the rest of the country from the coalition. While the two  missions have worked very effectively together, this is not as easy as it  sounds. The missions are operating under different mandates and with differing  objectives, with the coalition heavily involved in counterterrorist  operations.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">However, coordination has  been good to date, and NATO and U.S.  planners are now working to capitalize on the benefits of synergy between ISAF  and coalition missions. They have also been designing a unified command structure  for the future, with the aim of NATO taking on the rest of the country probably  in 2006, first in the south and then in the east. This step will be an  important one for the Alliance,  both in terms of philosophy and commitment. A sharply increased force level  will be required and political will will be needed for the Alliance to engage more in offensive  operations, with the risks that it involves.&nbsp; <br>
          The success of the  presidential elections provided some good indications of progress. The fact  that the insurgent groups failed to make a significant impact on the elections,  despite the threat, indicates that their capacity is diminishing, and I am  confident they can no longer widely threaten the country. The main influences  on security are now illegal armed groups, criminality, and the all-pervasive  narcotics trade. The key regional power brokers have learned that the only way  to maintain influence is as part of the legitimate political process and within  the law. So we now need to ensure that the lower-level commanders realize the  same thing, work that will be aided by the fact that a growing proportion of  the public is simply not prepared to tolerate regional and local power brokers  who undermine the authority of the central government.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">The key to eventual success  is security sector reform, which will provide the means by which the central  government will extend and deepen its influence. Such reform is the precursor  to the international community&rsquo;s giving full responsibility for security to the  Afghans, and to eventually leaving. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">The Disarmament,  Demobilization, and Reintegration (DDR) program has been an important element  of security sector reform, with the goal of having the national army and police  be the only forces to bear arms. At present a large number of former combatants  have been disarmed and almost all the heavy weapons have been cantoned, both of  which are very promising steps for the security situation and the strengthening  of democracy.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">ISAF has provided key support  to the DDR program and will continue to do so. The next issue we will address  will be the illegal armed groups that are currently outside the DDR process.  The Afghan government is increasingly focused on this issue and in turn we are  working on how we can best support their effort.&nbsp;</p>
        <p align="center" class="style30"><strong>WORKING WITH THE AFGHAN GOVERNMENT&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">While great progress has been  made in other areas, such as developing the Afghan national army and police  forces, there is still a long way to go before the Afghans can take full  responsibility for their own security. We need to be cognizant of the fact that  the more support we provide in developing Afghan security forces, empowering  the Afghans to provide their own security, the earlier we are likely to be able  to end our mission. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">In addition to developing  security capacity, the international community continues to work with the  Afghan government on countering the narcotics trade and on judicial system  development and reform. Most people would agree that the drug issue is the most  pressing issue confronting Afghanistan  today. The country is the largest opium producer in the world and drugs are  believed to represent well over half of Afghanistan&rsquo;s gross domestic  product. The government has taken a very courageous stance in combating this  evil and, with international assistance, has set up special police forces that  are tasked with drug trade interdiction and eradication. President Karzai has  also raised public awareness and has engaged the support of Afghanistan&rsquo;s  religious leaders. But if the state does not firmly impose law and order it  will lose the respect of its citizens and cede control to the drug traffickers,  some of whom are very powerful. However, there already have been some  encouraging early indications that the work is having an effect. Still, we need  to be realistic; tackling the drug issue requires a coordinated, focused, and  long-term effort by all quarters, both at the national and international  levels.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">A key problem of this issue is  achieving the right balance between eradication, interdiction, and economic  alternatives. It is critical that we develop alternative livelihoods for those  involved in narcotics and not try to impose a solution that puts ordinary  Afghans in the impossible position of choosing between compliance with our  wishes and feeding their families. Eradication of the opium crop without  providing alternative livelihoods is a prescription for failure and for  alienating the very population we are there to support.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">NATO&rsquo;s mandate does not give  ISAF an active role in interdiction or eradication of drugs, but it does  provide for supporting the Afghan government&rsquo;s counter-narcotics strategy. It  also facilitates assisting Afghan institutions and security forces in their long-term  efforts to combat this evil. Therefore we must acknowledge the necessity for an  overall, internationally recognized counter-narcotics strategy that is both  complementary and sustainable.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30"><strong>CONCLUDING REMARKS&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Today Afghanistan is  struggling to overcome the legacy of 25 years of continuous warfare. There are  enormous needs to repair the infrastructure, reconstitute a health-care system,  and reopen schools, to name just a few key tasks. But it is important to  recognize that many of the problems the Afghans face have been many years in  the making. Therefore there will be no quick solutions&mdash;this will be a long-term  partnership with the Afghans that will require long-term commitment from the  international community, both at the governmental and non-governmental  levels.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">However, I marvel at what has  already been achieved by so many dedicated people, and at the will of the  Afghan people to make their country a better place. But we cannot afford to be  self-righteous&mdash;there are many challenges still to be met and overcome. Success  can be achieved only by the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan,  with the support of the ordinary people of their country and backed by a  resolute international community. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">The mission in Afghanistan represents the first time in NATO&rsquo;s  56-year history that the Alliance  has undertaken an operation outside its geographic region. Indeed, the  footprints of Alliance transformation are  everywhere in Kabul and beyond&mdash;a fact that is  nothing less than revolutionary and that points the way for the future of the Alliance. Given my  experience with current operations, I believe that in this future, in order to  engage in operations with maximum effect, we will need to address many  overarching issues. In particular, we will need to shorten the fuse between the  identification of an emerging crisis and the delivery of the military force  that will provide part of the solution. Solving such issues will signal that  the Alliance is  moving to the next stage of full maturity.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21 style21">Those working in the  organization know that we are no longer holding on to old methods and old  thinking and are continually seeking to improve. We are also making  technological advancements, streamlining operations, creating conceptual  initiatives, and developing leadership challenges. As I speak about these  dramatic changes, I am reminded of the statement made by the former NATO  Secretary General, Lord George Robertson, who said, &ldquo;This is not your daddy&rsquo;s  NATO.&rdquo; &nbsp;The bottom line is that there is no turning back.&nbsp; </p>
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