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This is an archive article published on December 7, 2009

NATO to pledge forces for Afghan war

Military representatives of NATO's 28 member nations met today to pledge additional troops to serve alongside the 30,000 reinforcements committed to Afghanistan by Obama,a spokesman said.

Military representatives of NATO’s 28 member nations met today to pledge additional troops to serve alongside the 30,000 reinforcements committed to Afghanistan by President Barack Obama,a spokesman said.

The conference at NATO’s military headquarters in Mons,Belgium,is expected to confirm last week’s pledges made by allied nations for an additional 7,000 troops. Results will be announced tomorrow after the meeting ends,NATO deputy spokeswoman Carmen Romero said.

On Friday,NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he expects member states to commit several thousand more troops by the time of an international conference in London in January,where the allies will discuss the war effort and an eventual exit strategy with Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai.

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The Obama administration expects its allies in the International Security Assistance Force,known as ISAF,to provide up to 10,000 additional troops. Together with the 30,000 new US troops and ISAF’s current 106,000 members,the international force would number over 140,000 by the middle of next year.

A large percentage of the European reinforcements are expected to be trainers for the expanding Afghan security forces. Others will likely be sent to southern Afghanistan,including its volatile Helmand province,one of the key centers of the Taliban-led insurgency.

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