NATO agrees new chief at riot-scarred summit

STRASBOURG, France (Reuters) – NATO named Danish  Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen as its next leader yesterday, averting a damaging split with Turkey at a 60th  anniversary summit marred by rioting protesters.

US President Barack Obama prodded European allies to do  more in Afghanistan, but received pledges for only 5,000 extra  troops, the majority of whom will go on a temporary basis to  provide security during August elections.
The meeting of the 28-nation military alliance, created  after World War Two to defend Europe’s borders, exposed  transatlantic divisions despite a new US strategy for  Afghanistan that Obama’s European allies broadly welcomed.

The summit was also plagued by unusually destructive  protests, with masked youths burning down a seven-storey hotel  and riot police unleashing volleys of teargas and shock grenades  to try to contain the violence.
Obama was cheered by crowds waving American flags when he  arrived in France on Friday with his wife Michelle, offering the  prospect of a new era of cooperation with Europe following the  strains under his predecessor, George W Bush.

“The United States came here to listen, to learn and to  lead, because all of us have a responsibility to do our part,”  Obama told reporters at the end of the two-day summit.

“America cannot meet our global challenges alone. Nor can  Europe meet them without America.”
Obama then flew to Prague for a US-European Union summit today and will go on to Turkey, the last stop on a tour that  started at the G20 economic summit in London. In Strasbourg, as  in London, Obama played a big role in securing a compromise deal  but did not win major concessions from allies.

Obama played a key role in brokering a deal with Turkey on  the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation’s next leader. Ankara had  opposed Rasmussen’s bid because of his handling of a 2006 crisis  over cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in a Danish newspaper.

When Turkey threatened to torpedo his candidacy, US  officials said Obama pulled Rasmussen and Turkish President  Abdullah Gul together, helping avert a damaging row that could  have derailed the summit and hurt all three leaders.

Gul later told reporters that Rasmussen, who will travel to  Istanbul next week, had pledged to make an “extraordinary  effort” to overcome concerns over his image. It also received  assurances one of Rasmussen’s deputies would be a Turk.

“I made it clear I will reach out to the Muslim world and I  will make sure we will cooperate closely with Turkey,” said  Rasmussen, who will take over from Dutchman Jaap de Hoop  Scheffer on Aug. 1.
NATO members came to the summit in the French city of  Strasbourg and nearby German towns of Kehl and Baden-Baden  hoping to forge a new strategic vision for the alliance.
NATO accepted France back into its military command after   four decades, and welcomed Albania and Croatia as members.

The group has expanded to 28 nations despite the demise of  its first foe, the Soviet Union, but is struggling in  Afghanistan, seven years after US-backed forces toppled the  Taliban following the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States.

NATO members agreed at the summit to send 5,000 additional  troops and trainers, including 3,000 soldiers that will help  provide security during Afghan elections in August.     But the pledges are unlikely to silence critics who say the  war is becoming increasingly “Americanised.”

The United States has 38,000 troops in Afghanistan, more  than all the other national contingents put together. Obama has  said he will add an extra 17,000 combat troops as well as 4,000  others to help train Afghan officials.
His new strategy also focuses on rooting out insurgents  across the border in Pakistan and he said on Saturday additional  aid for that country would depend on how Islamabad tackled the  threat of terrorism.

Masked youths hurled petrol bombs, smashed windows and  ransacked shops, temporarily forcing police into retreat in  Strasbourg. German police crossed the short distance into  neighbouring France to help put out fires, which gutted a row of  low storey buildings and ravaged an IBIS hotel.

The worst of the violence was centred close to the French  side of the Bridge of Europe, just 5 km (3 miles) from the  conference centre where the leaders met. A pall of black smoke  was clearly visible from the summit venue.