French ceremony as new Nato Afghan mission takes over

01 Jan, 2015

The last French troops in Afghanistan held a ceremony in Kabul on Wednesday to mark the end of their deployment after Nato combat operations closed down and as a new "train and support" mission takes over. About 150 French soldiers who had been helping run the military airport handed over responsibility to a Turkish unit which will operate under the new Nato mission.
Nato's war in Afghanistan formally ended on Sunday, when the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) was replaced by the US-led follow-up mission "Resolute Support". France, which withdrew all its combat troops from the country two years ago, lost 89 soldiers and saw 700 injured in the war since 2001. The conflict against the Taliban still rages across Afghanistan, and an estimated 17,000 foreign soldiers will stay on to assist the local police and army, who face a major challenge as the international military presence declines.
"The threat is still present, insurgents continue to be active, but what has been accomplished in 13 years is considerable in terms of governance, development, security," said General Gratien Maire, second in command of the French military. The soldiers could leave with "the satisfaction of a duty well done" he said. The foreign force next year will consist of the 12,500-strong Nato mission, most of them US troops, and a US counter-terrorism operation outside the Nato remit, though final numbers remain unclear.
The Taliban issued another statement on Wednesday celebrating the end of Nato's combat mission, adding that no peace talks could happen before all foreign troops leave. "Today, they are evacuating their invading forces from Afghanistan while they are bitterly defeated by the just and pious Afghan resistance," the group said. "The real solution of the ongoing Afghan crisis is in the complete and unconditional withdrawal of all foreign forces from this country.
"The presence of foreign occupiers is main cause of instability and chaos." The Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001, have waged a resilient insurgency against Nato and Afghan forces, with violence now at record levels nation-wide. The United Nations said civilian casualties hit a new high this year with about 10,000 non-combatants killed or wounded - 75 percent of them by the Taliban.

Read Comments