US, NATO must change to win Afghan war-commander

KABUL/WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The United States and  its allies must change strategy and boost cooperation to turn  around the war in Afghanistan, the top U.S. and NATO commander  there said yesterday, wrapping up a much-anticipated review.  U.S. Army General Stanley McChrystal said the situation was  “serious” but the 8-year-old war could still be won. He gave no  indication if he would ask for more troops but is widely  expected to do so in the coming weeks.

With U.S. and NATO casualties at record levels in  Afghanistan and doubts growing about the war in the United  States and other NATO nations, McChrystal is under pressure to  reverse Western fortunes within months.

“The situation in Afghanistan is serious, but success is  achievable and demands a revised implementation strategy,  commitment and resolve, and increased unity of effort,”  McChrystal said in a statement announcing his report was done.

The confidential report comes as Afghans anxiously awaited  the outcome of their Aug. 20 presidential election.

New, partial results released on Monday showed President  Hamid Karzai maintaining a lead over his main rival, former  Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah, but still without the  outright majority needed to avoid a runoff.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said any recommendation  for more forces would have to address his concerns that the  foreign military presence in Afghanistan could become too large  and be seen by Afghans as a hostile occupying force.

“Clearly, I want to address those issues and we will have  to look at the availability of forces, we’ll have to look at  costs. There are a lot of different things that we’ll have to  look at,” he told reporters.

“While there’s a lot of gloom and doom going around … I  think we have some assets in place and some developments that  hold promise,” Gates said on a visit to a Lockheed Martin  factory building F-35 fighter jets in Fort Worth, Texas.

McChrystal has 103,000 troops under his command, including  63,000 Americans, half of whom arrived this year as part of an  escalation strategy begun under President George W. Bush and  ramped up under his successor, Barack Obama. The Western force  is set to rise to 110,000, including 68,000 Americans by year’s  end.

A further increase could be politically difficult for  Obama, with members of his Democratic Party increasingly uneasy  about the war and congressional elections due next year.