Canada in Afghanistan -   

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Prime Minister Stephen Harper in an interview with Fareed Zakaria on CNN, Sunday, March 1, 2009. Prime Minister Stephen Harper in an interview with Fareed Zakaria on CNN, Sunday, March 1, 2009. People in Kabul, Afghanistan pass a giant picture of President Hamid Karzai Sunday, March 1, 2009. (AP / Rafiq Maqbool)

NATO can't beat Afghan insurgents alone: Harper

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CTV Newsnet: Dawn Black, NDP defence critic
The opposition reacts to comments made by Prime Minister Stephen Harper which suggested that western forces alone cannot defeat the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan.
CTV Newsnet: Maj-Gen. (Ret'd) Lewis MacKenzie, military analyst
A military analyst discusses whether NATO will ever be able to defeat the Afghan insurgency after the prime minister admitted on a U.S. news show that he did not believe this mission would succeed.

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Date: Sun. Mar. 1 2009 8:53 PM ET

OTTAWA — Western forces alone can never defeat the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan and President Barack Obama better realize that in shaping his strategy there, says Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

In an interview aired Sunday on the U.S. news network CNN, Harper said he's "delighted" the U.S. president is sending more troops to the country in the short term.

Many of them will be deployed in the Kandahar region, where more than 2,000 Canadian soldiers already on the ground can use the help.

But in the longer run, said Harper, it's the government in Kabul that will have to run its own country and be responsible for its own security.

"We're not going to win this war just by staying," he told interviewer Fareed Zakaria.

"Quite frankly, we are not going to ever defeat the insurgency. Afghanistan has probably had -- my reading of Afghanistan history (is) it's probably had an insurgency forever of some kind.

"What has to happen in Afghanistan is we have to have an Afghan government that is capable of managing that insurgency."

Asked if the current administration of President Hamid Karzai has the legitimacy to do that, Harper replied: "There is no doubt that governance in Afghanistan has to improve, and has to improve, and has to improve much more quickly than we've seen."

Harper has repeatedly stated he's sticking to a commitment to pull Canadian combat forces out of Afghanistan by the end of 2011, although Canada would likely maintain a more limited presence focusing on development and reconstruction.

Obama said on his recent visit to Ottawa he didn't press the prime minister to change his mind. But if the U.S. leader did ask him to stay, Harper said Sunday, he'd want to know more about the long-term goals and the ultimate end date for the mission.

"Over the long haul, if President Obama wants anybody to do more, I would ask very hard questions about what is your strategy for success and for an eventual departure."

The comments are not a radical departure from Harper's past observations but he has rarely been so blunt in assessing the situation.

Canadian and other NATO troops have made some gains against the insurgents over the years but those gains are not irreversible and the overall success has been "modest," Harper said.

Western forces cannot indefinitely ensure the security of the country, nor can outsiders hope to govern Afghanistan.

"Ultimately, the source of authority in Afghanistan has to be perceived as being indigenous. If it's perceived as being foreign, it will always have a significant degree of opposition."

The CNN interview was recorded a week ago, as Harper visited New York City for talks at the UN and a round of sessions with U.S. news media.

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