Britain's Afghan commander hails "end of beginning"
By Luke Baker
KAJAKI, Afghanistan (Reuters) - The commander of British forces in Afghanistan lauded the successful delivery of a turbine to Helmand province on Tuesday, calling it the "end of the beginning" of the campaign against the Taliban.
Brigadier Mark Carleton-Smith said the secret five-day operation, which he compared to major missions in World War Two for its logistical and engineering complexity, had shown the Taliban could be outwitted and did not have popular support.
"It clearly demonstrated that while the Taliban may claim to be the custodians of the Afghan people, the reality was it was their expressed purpose to prevent the turbine arriving in Kajaki," he said, emphasising how the failure undermined them.
"I would sense that in the sweep of the campaign, this marks the end of the beginning. We understand the problems here much more clearly. We have a strategy that looks as though it may work," he told Reuters in an interview.
At the same time, he said Britain should expect to invest military capability in Afghanistan for "certainly another three to five years" if it were to contain the Taliban threat.
The operation involved driving a 200-tonne turbine across 160 km (100 miles) of desert and mountain passes in a vast, 100-vehicle convoy that had to be protected by a fleet of attack helicopters and special forces troops on all sides.
The success of the operation -- with only one wounded among the nearly 5,000 British, American, Canadian, Danish, Australian and Afghan troops who contributed -- was attributed in large part to a deception carried out by Danish forces.
They drove a similar looking convoy up a separate route west of the one the real convoy took through the desert, diverting the Taliban's attention and allowing them to be outflanked.
"By the time that they were in a position to recognise that they had been spoofed, they had no time to prevent our outmanoeuvring on the eastern flank," Carleton-Smith said.
Around 250 Taliban are estimated to have been killed in air strikes and other attacks during the course of the operation.
HELMAND NOT LIKE THE MOON
While it will be at least 18 months before the turbine is installed and producing more power across southern Afghanistan, the fact it has been delivered -- after two years of promises -- and right into the heart of Taliban territory, has given a boost to the 8,000 British troops serving in Helmand.
It has not been an easy three months -- 20 British soldiers have been killed since June and the relatively small force is stretched in its ability to secure a province almost the size of Wales -- but the turbine operation has lifted spirits.
Carleton-Smith conceded the Taliban were likely to immediately reoccupy ground they have been driven out of over the past five days as British troops were unable to hold it forever, but he said they had still suffered a strategic defeat.
"Given that (the Taliban) no longer enjoy popular consent from the Afghan people whom are overwhelmingly hostile to them, clearly they no longer represent to that extent a strategic threat to the government," the 44-year-old said. Continued...
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