Michael Yon: Japanese Aid to Afghanistan Print E-mail
Thursday, 12 November 2009
pemKathmandu, Nepal /em— The Japanese are pulling naval assets from the fight in Afghanistan, but they are adding assets in another category. I asked Secretary of Defense Robert Gates (who has not responded), Gen. David Petraeus, and Gen. (ret.) Barry McCaffrey to comment on this report:/p blockquote pa href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jJbxW8YwbCY1oVZ8CXmOErYWBnLgD9BSIS080" target="_blank"Japan plans additional $5 billion for Afghanistan/abr /By JAY ALABASTER (AP)/p pTOKYO — Japan on Tuesday announced $5 billion in fresh aid to Afghanistan even as it plans to bring home refueling ships supporting U.S.-led forces there. The pledge comes just days before President Barack Obama arrives in Tokyo for talks that are sure to focus on the countries' military alliance./p pThe announcement appears to be a way for Japan, which is barred from sending troops for combat by its pacifist constitution, to show support for Afghanistan's reconstruction while Obama reviews his options for a new strategy in the conflict./p /blockquote pGeneral Petraeus responded: em“It reflects a significant commitment, one that will provide important resources to Afghanistan during an important period.”/em/p pGeneral McCaffrey responded:/p p style="padding-left: 30px;"emMichael,/em/p p style="padding-left: 30px;"emThe Japanese commitment of $5 billion in aid to Afghanistan coming just prior to President Obama's visit to Tokyo is a welcome signal of financial support for Washington./em/p p style="padding-left: 30px;"emOur Allies in Afghanistan are headed for the door. The Canadians and Dutch have already said they will withdraw troops in the coming 24 months. The Germans are of dubious value with their constricting rules of engagement. Japan itself has announced it will end its Indian Ocean refueling mission. Only the courageous Brits are there in any strength with the will to fight./em/p p style="padding-left: 30px;"emThe Japanese constitution and their political legacy from WWII make them literally worthless as a deployed ground combat military force. In Iraq they were incapable of even defending themselves with their modest troop commitment. Therefore, this significant financial support during a Japanese financial recession is a positive outreach for this critical ally./em/p pI am very interested to hear the thoughts of Secretary Gates. The Japanese decision is significant and will affect the war. I suspect the Canadian decision is mostly (but not totally) read


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