Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07USNATO540
2007-10-04 07:27:00
CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN
Mission USNATO
Cable title:  

NORTH ATLANTIC COUNCIL READOUT - OCTOBER 3, 2007

Tags:  NATO PREL AF 
pdf how-to read a cable
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FM USMISSION USNATO
TO RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC IMMEDIATE
RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 1245
INFO RUEHZG/NATO EU COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUCNOSC/ORG FOR SECURITY CO OP IN EUR COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHAR/AMEMBASSY ACCRA PRIORITY 0006
RUEHAK/AMEMBASSY ANKARA PRIORITY 0415
RUEHGB/AMEMBASSY BAGHDAD PRIORITY 0356
RUEHRL/AMEMBASSY BERLIN PRIORITY 0620
RUEHIL/AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD PRIORITY 0372
RUEHBUL/AMEMBASSY KABUL PRIORITY 0693
RUEHKH/AMEMBASSY KHARTOUM PRIORITY 0225
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 0260
RUEHMD/AMEMBASSY MADRID PRIORITY 0683
RUEHNE/AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI PRIORITY 0101
RUEHOT/AMEMBASSY OTTAWA PRIORITY 0491
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS PRIORITY 0359
RUEHRO/AMEMBASSY ROME PRIORITY 0597
RUEHWR/AMEMBASSY WARSAW PRIORITY 4074
C O N F I D E N T I A L USNATO 000540 

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C O R R E C T E D C O P Y -- ADDED NORFORN CAPTION TO PARAGRAPHS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/03/2017
TAGS: NATO PREL AF
SUBJECT: NORTH ATLANTIC COUNCIL READOUT - OCTOBER 3, 2007

Classified By: DCM Richard G. Olson for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L USNATO 000540

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NOFORN

SIPDIS

C O R R E C T E D C O P Y -- ADDED NORFORN CAPTION TO PARAGRAPHS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/03/2017
TAGS: NATO PREL AF
SUBJECT: NORTH ATLANTIC COUNCIL READOUT - OCTOBER 3, 2007

Classified By: DCM Richard G. Olson for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)


1. (C/NF) Summary from the NAC Meeting:

-- Afghanistan: MG Robert Cone, Commander of the U.S.
Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan (CSTC-A),
reported on progress and challenges training Afghan National
Security Forces and noted new efforts to build police through
&Focused District Development.8 SHAPE DCOS Ops MG Wright
briefed on the launch of Operation Pamir and provided updates
on the status of integrating Afghan staff officers into ISAF
HQ, as well as civilian casualties investigations.

Mr. Peter Holland, the Head of the Afghan Anti-Drug Unit at
the UK FCO, briefed the NAC on the counternarcotics (CN)
situation in Afghanistan. Noting the increase in poppy
cultivation in the south, Holland stated there has been
progress implementing the CN multi-pillar strategy, targeting
eradication, traffickers, alternative livelihoods, justice
sector, and noted that the drop in cultivation in the north
can be linked to economic factors. Holland commented that
one way to drive a wedge between the traffickers and Taliban
is to recognize their different motives. He spoke highly of
the U.S.-led Good Performers Initiative and voiced his belief
that the NATO OPLAN is a sufficient framework to make
progress on CN, but added that ISAF can contribute more on
intel/info sharing, better strategic messaging, and more
support to Afghan law enforcement. Later in the day, Mr.
Holland provided the same briefing to the Policy Coordination
Group in ISAF format, which included ISAF partner countries.

-- Balkans: No discussion.

-- Darfur: The SYG commended nations ) particularly the U.S.
and the UK ) who have provided airlift to the AU under the
NATO umbrella. He then called on member states to offer
airlift for the Ghanaian civil police detachment that is part
of the autumn rotation and emphasized the importance of NATO
demonstrating to the AU that it is a reliable partner.

-- Iraq: The SYG noted with regret the attempt on the life of
the Polish Ambassador to Iraq, General Edward Pietrzyk.

-- Response to Terrorism: The SYG expressed condolences for
recent attacks in Turkey and noted that, in reference to last
week's briefing on homegrown terrorism, a paper will be
published by TTIU on the significance of the Indian
subcontinent to homegrown terrorism. The Turkish PermRep
told the NAC that recent attacks were consistent with tactics
perpetrated by the PKK and noted an agreement signed on
September 28 between Turkey and Iraq to cooperate against
terrorism, specifically the PKK and Al Qaida. The SYG stated
that the Office of Security will examine the update to the
paper on NATO,s contribution to counter-terrorism that it
prepared for the 2006 NATO Summit in Riga with the aim of
preparing a new paper for the 2008 Bucharest Summit.

-- AOB: The SYG noted that the military advice on alternative
ways to structure the NRF was under silence until today at
17:00. He stated his concern that the military advice alone
would not be enough for Defense Ministers to have a
substantive discussion at the informal Defense Ministerial
October 24-25. The lack of detail could also negatively
affect the November NRF Force Gen conference.

END SUMMARY.

--------------
Afghanistan
--------------


2. (C/NF) MG Cone briefed the NAC on CSTC-A,s efforts to train
Afghan National Army (ANA) and Afghan National Police (ANP)
forces, citing adequate progress with the ANA, and
significant problems remaining with the ANP (slides emailed
to EUR/RPM). He stated that CSTC-A had shifted approximately
30 of its training resources from the ANA to the ANP, and
highlighted the crucial role that NATO Operational Mentoring
and Liaison Teams (OMLTs) needed to play in order to enable
the ANA to continue its upward development trajectory, while
enabling more U.S. embedded trainers to shift their focus to
the ANP. Acknowledging the prior lack of unity of effort on
police development among the international community, he
pointed to the new International Police Coordination Board as
a potential remedy and described to the NAC the Focused
District Development (FDD) program for the ANP. The FDD aims
to use select districts as the building blocks for a
strategic ANP presence throughout Afghanistan; these
districts are selected in close cooperation with ISAF,s
overall campaign plan.


3. (C/NF) Looking first at the ANA, MG Cone stated that
approximately 50,000 (out of a planned force of 70,000) ANA
soldiers had been assigned, and the major challenge now was
getting them into the fight properly equipped. All five
Maneuver Corps, and ten of fourteen Brigade HQs, have been
stood up. Over the next four months, he anticipated, roughly
7,000 new ANA soldiers would deploy, largely to the south and
the east. While noting chronic ANA shortfalls of key
enablers (particularly close air support and medevac)
necessary for the ANA to conduct fully independent
operations, he stated the ANA is increasingly taking the lead
and performing well with the assistance of NATO OMLTs and
U.S. ETTs (Embedded Training Teams). He described how better
pay and planned leave rotations have led to increased
retention rates (around 45-65%) and reduced AWOL rates. With
electronic funds transfers and dependable leave, soldiers no
longer have to go AWOL to give money to their families or
take care of family business. Improved retention has led to
an improved NCO corps and enhanced professionalism. The
major problems included over-reliance on centralization that
hampered decision-making in the field, a tendency for ANA
units to rely on handouts from the civilian population
instead of their logistics network (which is in place, MG
Cone said),and inadequate equipment.


4. (C/NF) MG Cone cited a lack of unity of effort by the
international community over the past years as a key factor
in the lack of development of the ANP, pointing to the new
International Police Cooperation Board as a potential fix
that could help all actors pull in the same direction. He
acknowledged the conflicting visions among the international
community of the ideal role and composition of an Afghan
police force, describing the different types of police that
made up the ANP, including the uniformed police, Afghan
National Civil Order Police (ANCOP),Afghan Border Police
(ABP),Counternarcotics Police of Afghanistan (CNPA),and
Afghan National Auxiliary Police (ANAP). The FDD aims to
harmonize competing international views, bringing together
the right mix of police and army forces in tailored packages
for key districts, breaking the cycle of corruption and as MG
Cone described, &putting the stakes in the ground on which
the future ANP presence will be built.8 MG Cone told the
NAC he was working well with new EUPOL head General Schulz,
and that he hoped EUPOL could bring higher-end training
capabilities (meaning district and province-level mentoring)
as part of the FDD program.


5. (C/NF) At several points throughout the brief, MG Cone showed
how NATO,s inability to fulfill its commitment to field
OMLTs hampers both ANA development and, importantly, U.S.
efforts to enhance ANP training. Of the 103 OMLTs that will
be required when the ANA reaches its authorized strength of
70,000, 44 have been offered, with 22 on the ground, and 22
more in the pipeline. This OMLT shortfall impacts the
ability of Afghan forces to perform current missions in the
field, hampers their long-term development, and prevents the
U.S. from bolstering police training efforts, MG Cone
emphasized.


6. (C/NF) Ambassador Nuland thanked Allies for present OMLT
contributions, but reminded of the need to at least double
the numbers by winter. She invited MG Cone to give the NAC a
&target list8 of nations he thought were capable to do
more, asked about ANCOP capabilities to hold ground ISAF had
cleared (too soon to judge, MG Cone assessed),and encouraged
the teamwork in the FDD program between CSTC-A and EUPOL that
MG had cited. The UK PermRep asked about integrating
traditional tribal Afghan justice actors such as the
&Arbakai8 into overall police efforts in tribal areas (MG
Cone replied the idea had merit as long as it was tied into
national police efforts and structure). The German PermRep
asked where the delineation of responsibilities between ANA
and ANP should be drawn, specifically questioning who should
perform the &hold8 function in a piece of territory that
ISAF had &cleared.8 Each situation was unique, MG Cone
stated. He agreed that police should not be expected to
engage enemy forces in direct combat, and explained that if
ISAF forces had killed all the enemy forces in an operation,
perhaps a holding operation could be conducted with police.
But if enemy forces had simply melted away in the presence of
ISAF, then ANA and heavier forces would be necessary to
prevent a return, he concluded. The Polish PermRep asked
about the representation of different ethnicities in the ANP,
particularly Pashtuns from the south and east. MG Cone noted
that progress on this issue has not been satisfactory.


7. (C/NF) In the weekly operational update to the Council, SHAPE
DCOS for Operations MG Wright briefed on the October 1
commencement of Operation Pamir, which replaced Now Ruz as
COMSAF,s theater-wide effort. Pamir aims to take advantage
of the historical enemy tendency to seek winter sanctuary by
bottling up insurgents in those sanctuaries, separating them
from the local population, and degrading leadership and
fighting capabilities in advance of spring 2008. MG Wright
updated on the status of ISAF HQ,s &Project 65,8 which
aims to integrate 15 staff officers in ISAF HQ by mid-to-late
2008, and 50 in the five ISAF Regional Commands. Eleven
Afghan candidates have been identified for ISAF HQ, but ISAF
has experienced significant challenges finding qualified
personnel via the MOD. Language skills are often a stumbling
block. Finally, MG Wright gave an update on the status of
ISAF investigations into civilian casualty incidents. Of
nine events from September 6 to October 2, three
investigations are closed and six are open. COMISAF recently
ruled that ISAF forces acted properly in the September 19
incident in Gereshk, where ISAF close air support
accidentally killed eight civilians. The Spanish PermRep
asked when the NAC would see results of an investigation into
allegations of large numbers of civilian casualties in the
Shindand district of Herat province April 29-30. The
Chairman of the Military Committee reminded the Spaniard that
the Shindand incident involved OEF forces, not ISAF, but that
SHAPE would inquire with USCENTCOM nonetheless. The UK
PermRep continued his campaign (three straight weeks of
similar interventions) to place a senior Afghan military
officer into ISAF HQ, who could help with &synergy of
effort,8 and help with &presentation8 by portraying ISAF
efforts to include Afghans. The Canadian PermRep reiterated
his call last week for the NAC briefings to encompass
political developments as well as operational content, citing
President Karzai,s dialogue with the Taliban, PRT progress
reports, and Pakistani political developments as pertinent
subjects for the NAC to consider.


8. (C/NF) Mr. Peter Holland, the Head of the Afghan Anti-Drug
Unit at the UK FCO, briefed the NAC on the counternarcotics
(CN) situation in Afghanistan. His remarks were similar to a
briefing he gave at the NAC March 28. Noting the increase in
poppy cultivation in the south, Holland stated there has been
progress implementing the CN multi-pillar strategy, targeting
eradication, traffickers, alternative livelihoods, justice
sector, etc. He noted that the drop in cultivation in the
north can be linked to economic factors ) a drop in opium
prices and an increase in input costs created a reduction in
production. He said that we must continue to address those
factors but should not be surprised if there is a cyclical
rebound in cultivation in the future.


9. (C/NF) For the future, Holland commented that one way to
drive a wedge between the traffickers and Taliban is to
recognize their different motives. Traffickers are motivated
by money not ideology, so when their financial risks
increase, they will change their behavior, which the Taliban
may not do. He noted that improved public messaging and
better agricultural development projects are important, and
he spoke highly of the U.S.-led Good Performers Initiative.
More challenging goals include addressing corruption and more
effective eradication.


10. (C/NF) Holland believes the ISAF OPLAN is a sufficient
framework to make progress on CN, adding that ISAF and PRTs
have been helpful in many ways, from organizing shuras to
supporting logistics for AEF. ISAF can contribute more, he
added, on intel/info sharing, better messaging, and more
support to law enforcement.


11. (C/NF) In response to PermReps, questions, Holland noted
that while eradication runs a risk of alienating farmers and
making the Taliban message more attractive to them, such
exploitation by the Taliban is already going on and is a part
of the environment, with or without eradication. This
concern should not hold back our CN efforts, he stated.
Regarding opium processing, he noted that processing labs are
mobile and easy to set up. ISAF can close labs where they
come upon them, but the more important effort is to dismantle
networks so the labs do not reappear.


12. (C/NF) Later in the day, Mr. Holland provided the same
briefing to the Policy Coordination Group in ISAF format,
which included ISAF partner countries.


13. (C/NF) UK PermRep Eldon spoke highly of his trip to
Afghanistan last week with Ambassador Nuland, particularly
commenting on signs of progress in Sangin province.

--------------
Balkans
--------------


14. (C/NF) No discussion.

--------------
Darfur
--------------


15. (C/NF) The SYG commended nations ) particularly the U.S.
and the UK ) who have provided airlift to the AU under the
NATO umbrella. He then called on member states to offer
airlift for the Ghanaian civil police detachment that is part
of the autumn rotation and emphasized the importance of NATO
demonstrating to the AU that it is a reliable partner.

--------------
Iraq
--------------


16. (C/NF) The SYG noted with regret the attempt on the life of
the Polish Ambassador to Iraq, General Edward Pietrzyk.

--------------
Response to Terrorism
--------------


17. (C/NF) The SYG expressed condolences for recent attacks in
Turkey and noted his October 1 public statement condemning
the attack on a passenger bus in Eastern Turkey. Referring
to the presentation by the Special Committee at last week's
NAC of a paper on homegrown terrorism, he noted that a paper
will be published next week by the TTIU on the significance
of the Indian subcontinent to homegrown terrorism. Turkish
PermRep Ildem thanked the SYG for his words regarding the
recent acts of terrorism and told the NAC that Turkey
believes the acts were perpetrated by the PKK, an accusation
supported by the fact that either A4 or C4 explosives were
used, which is common in PKK,s attacks. Additionally, Ildem
noted an agreement signed on September 28 between Turkey and
Iraq to cooperate against terrorism, specifically the PKK and
Al Qaida.


18. (C/NF) The SYG addressed a question posed last week by the
Spanish PermRep regarding updating the 2005 NAC CT tasking to
the NATO Office of Security, saying that the Office of
Security will examine the update to the paper it prepared for
the 2006 NATO Summit in Riga with the aim of preparing a new
paper for the 2008 Bucharest Summit.

---
AOB
---


19. (C/NF) The SYG noted that the military advice on alternative
ways to structure the NRF was under silence in the Military
Committee until Wednesday at 17:00. If it passes silence, it
would then go to the NAC, after which the SYG said he hoped
work at SHAPE on the details of the proposed "graduated
force" structure would happen quickly. He said he was
concerned that the military advice alone would not be enough
for Defense Ministers to have a substantive discussion at the
October 24-25 informal defense ministerial in Noordwijk. The
lack of detail could also negatively affect the November NRF
Force Generation conference, since nations might be reluctant
to contribute forces while it was still unclear the type of
force to which they would be contributing.
NULAND