Most Australian forces to leave Afghanistan by 2013-end

AfghanistanMost Australian forces to leave Afghanistan by 2013-end

CANBERRA: Australian Defense Minister Stephen Smith said on Tuesday that his country will pull out most of its troops from Afghanistan’s south at the end of 2013 and close a major base for NATO-led forces, handing security to Afghan soldiers and police.

The defense minister said that Western and Afghan commanders had agreed that the major multinational coalition base at Tarin Kowt and its NATO airbase in Uruzgan province would be shut down at the end of this year.

Most foreign combat troops are due to leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014 under a planned security transition from foreign forces to Afghans.

“It is a necessary and logical and natural consequence of transition being effective,” Smith said. “The effect of that closure will be that Australia will no longer have a permanent presence in Uruzgan province, and the majority of Australian defense force personnel will return.”

Australia has around 1,650 troops in Afghanistan, including Special Forces, based mainly in volatile Uruzgan, and was an original member of the US-led coalition that helped oust the former Taliban government in late 2001. It has lost 39 troops in the war, with 242 wounded.

DND

Asad Haroon
Asad Haroon
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