Partly Cloudy
70°
DeKalb, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

Gunman kills member 
of Afghan peace council

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

The third and latest phase in the transition to Afghan-led security was announced with fanfare by Afghan officials.

Ashraf Ghani, head of a commission overseeing the transition, said that this stage — which ends with the Afghans taking the lead in areas representing 75 percent of the population of some 34 million — should be complete within six months.

“The third transition will be difficult — we don’t want to lie to the Afghan people,” Ghani acknowledged last week. But he added that the nation is strongly determined to take control of its own affairs.

Karzai’s announcement means that Afghan forces already, or soon will, lead security in all 34 provincial capitals and 260 of Afghanistan’s more than 360 districts. When the third phase of transition is complete, nearly a dozen provinces in their entirety will be under Afghan control.

In Washington, President Barack Obama welcomed the Karzai government’s announcement of the third phase in the transition to Afghan-led security, calling it “an important step forward in our effort to achieve our objectives in Afghanistan.”

Obama noted that “we remain on track to meet our goal of having the Afghan government fully responsible for security across the country by the end of 2014.”

In a statement released by the White House Press Office, Obama added that he looked forward to meeting with Karzai at next weekend’s NATO summit “to discuss these critical steps that will strengthen Afghan sovereignty while responsibly winding down the war.”

NATO will hold a summit May 20 and 21 in Chicago, where the training, funding and future of the Afghan national security forces will be a major topic.

“The completion of transition at the end of 2014 will mark the end of NATO’s combat role, but not the end of our engagement. NATO is committed to an enduring partnership with Afghanistan and to providing the training which the Afghan forces will still need beyond 2014,” NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said in a statement.

At the summit, “we will take the decisions which will shape that future training mission.”

___

Associated Press writers Kathy Gannon, Amir Shah and Patrick Quinn in Kabul contributed to this report.

||2|Next Page

Reader Poll

Do you shop at farmers markets and farm stands?

Weekly
Once or twice a summer
Never