Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09BRUSSELS1127
2009-08-13 12:03:00
CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN
USEU Brussels
Cable title:  

EUPOL DEPLOYMENT TO U.S. PRTS -- REQUEST FOR

Tags:  MARR MOPS PREL EUN 
pdf how-to read a cable
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RUEHBUL/AMEMBASSY KABUL PRIORITY
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC PRIORITY
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RUEHNO/USMISSION USNATO PRIORITY
RHMFISS/CDR USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/CJCS WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BRUSSELS 001127 

NOFORN
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/04/2019
TAGS: MARR MOPS PREL EUN
SUBJECT: EUPOL DEPLOYMENT TO U.S. PRTS -- REQUEST FOR
GUIDANCE

REF: KABUL 1270

BRUSSELS 00001127 001.2 OF 002


Classified By: Charge d'Affaires, a.i. Christopher Murray for reasons 1
.4(b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BRUSSELS 001127

NOFORN
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/04/2019
TAGS: MARR MOPS PREL EUN
SUBJECT: EUPOL DEPLOYMENT TO U.S. PRTS -- REQUEST FOR
GUIDANCE

REF: KABUL 1270

BRUSSELS 00001127 001.2 OF 002


Classified By: Charge d'Affaires, a.i. Christopher Murray for reasons 1
.4(b) and (d).


1. (U) This is a request for guidance. Please see paragraph

7.


2. (C) SUMMARY: On May 27, EUPOL Political Advisor
Jean-Baptiste Valmary and a staffer had met with USEU
political officers to provide an update on the EU civilian
police mission to Afghanistan, focusing on its training
activities in Kabul and the deployment of EU civilian police
to Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs). Valmary also
asked for an update on the status of U.S. efforts to
determine suitable arrangements to permit EU civilian police
to deploy to U.S.-led PRTs in Regional Command-East. He
reinforced the EU's desire to obtain a formal technical
agreement with the U.S. before deploying civilian police to
U.S.-led PRTs and asked that we inform the EU if this will
not be possible. On July 30-31, Brussels-based EUPOL staffer
Oceane Lahanque followed up Valmary's request and asked for a
response by September on U.S. willingness to negotiate a
formal technical agreement. END SUMMARY.

EU Activities and Civpol Deployment Status


3. (C) EUPOL now comprises about 265 international staff,
including both civilian police and support personnel,
according to Lahanque, well short of the EU's goal of
deploying 400 civpol to Afghanistan. A renewed call for
contributors was launched on July 31. Four non-EU members --
Canada, Norway, New Zealand, and Croatia -- are providing
personnel along with 20 EU Member States. Most EUPOL
employees are stationed in Kabul, where the EU has been
concentrating its training efforts on the Kabul city police.
Similar training campaigns are to be launched in Herat,
Baghdis and Mazar-e-Sharif, with the goal being to help
police secure the main Afghan cities. In May, Valmary said
that Minister of the Interior Atmar had given EUPOL a leading
role in anti-corruption work and that UNDP has asked EUPOL to
oversee training the police for upcoming elections.


4. (C) About 90 EU civpol have now been deployed to work with

Provincial Reconstruction Teams, Lahanque said. EU civpol
have joined 14 PRTs, including PRTs led by EU Member States
and non-EU countries like New Zealand, Norway, and Canada.
Most recently, Lahanque said, the EU had finalized a
technical agreement with the Czech Republic to permit
deployment to the Czech PRT in Loghar Province. The EU hopes
to deploy another 15 civpol to U.S.-led PRTs in ISAF's
Regional Command-East, including 5 personnel to Laghman
Province and 10 to PRT Jalalabad, and then possibly to other
PRTs in the area (REFTEL).

Progress on Bilateral Technical Agreements


5. (C) Lahanque noted that with the signing of the agreement
with the Czech Republic, the EU has bilateral technical
arrangements in place with all PRT lead nations other than
the U.S. and Turkey. The agreements cover logistical,
medical and transport arrangements as well as, most
importantly, in extremis support. Valmary said having a
formal agreement was "quite important" as the EU wanted
written assurances that "in case of need our people will be
extracted." Valmary asked that the U.S. inform the EU if a
bilateral EU-U.S. agreement was not possible, a request
Lahanque repeated. When pressed, Valmary was unable to
provide a bottom line on whether the EU would be able to
deploy EU civpol to the U.S.-led PRT in the absence of a
formal agreement. In Kabul, the EU works with ISAF without a
formal agreement, relying upon ISAF Standard Operating
Procedures, an arrangement which Valmary called "not very
satisfactory."

Deployment to RC-East


6. (C) Valmary and Lahanque were unclear about the status of
local negotiations to deploy EU civpol to RC-East and whether
U.S. officials on the ground have the authority to sign a
technical agreement. Lahanque requested a response by
September on whether the USG is willing to negotiate a

BRUSSELS 00001127 002 OF 002


technical arrangement, and with whom EUPOL should discuss the
details, as EUPOL will have to brief the EU Political and
Security Committee on the status of its deployment to RC-East
next month. Lahanque said EUPOL Head of Mission Kai Vittrup
had met with U.S. military commanders and the PRT Jalalabad
PolAd on July 14 in Bagram, where Vittrup confirmed EUPOL's
intent to deploy to RC-East and to be co-located with Dyncorp
and CSTC-A personnel. EUPOL, however, is still unclear about
whether U.S. commanders on the ground can sign a formal
agreement. At the meeting in Bagram, Vittrup reportedly
assured the U.S. that EUPOL would bring vehicles and
communications equipment, but would need housing, logistical,
and in extremis support. Lahanque provided USEU with
several example agreements -- between EUPOL and Norway, New
Zealand, and the Czech Republic -- which USEU will share with
EUR/ERA and SCA/A.

Guidance Request


7. (SBU) Request update on the status of arrangements for
deploying EU civpol to RC-East and whether we should continue
to encourage EUPOL to deploy civpol to RC-East. Also request
specific guidance in response to EU request on whether the
U.S. is willing to initiate negotiations on a formal
technical agreement, including assurances of in extremis
support to EU civpol. The technical agreement question was
first raised with us in letters from EU Council Secretariat
officials Pedro Serrano and Javier Solana in the spring of

2007.


8. (C) Comment: The immediate benefits of a deployment of
15 EU civilian police to RC-East may be fairly limited, but
there could be value in identifying a formula to elicit
broader EU civpol deployment. Taken in the context of the
total 90 EU civpol deployed outside Kabul in PRTs throughout
Afghanistan, a further 15 would appear to be a measurable
contribution. The EU views EUPOL as one of its flagship
contributions to Afghanistan. Permitting EUPOL to deploy to
U.S. PRTs could boost our ability to shape this and future EU
civilian missions and to solicit greater EU contributions
from the EU in Afghanistan generally. End Comment.
.