Compiled from International Security
Assistance Force Joint Command News Releases
WASHINGTON, April 20, 2012 – Four
International Security Assistance Force service members died in a helicopter
crash in southern Afghanistan yesterday, military officials reported.
The cause of the crash is under
investigation, officials said.
In other Afghanistan news, the U.S.
Army’s 1st Infantry Division, known as the “Big Red One,” took charge of
military operations in eastern Afghanistan during a ceremony at Bagram Airfield
yesterday, officials reported.
The division, which is home-based at
Fort Riley, Kan., assumed command authority of Regional Command-East from the
1st Cavalry Division. The latter unit is returning to Fort Hood, Texas, after a
successful year-long tour in Afghanistan.
Operating as Combined Joint Task
Force-1, the 1st Infantry Division will command and control operations
throughout RC-East, an area roughly the size of Virginia, including 14
provinces, 7.5 million Afghans and 450 kilometers of mountainous terrain along
the border with Pakistan.
Army Maj. Gen. William C. Mayville, Jr.,
commanding general of the 1st Infantry Division and CJTF-1, provided remarks
during the ceremony.
“Our mission over the next year is to
maintain the momentum of this campaign, relentlessly pursuing insurgent
networks, assisting Afghan efforts to assert sovereignty along the border, and
accelerating the development” of Afghan national security forces, Mayville
said.
Mayville’s task force consists of more
than 32,000 coalition troops, including five U.S. brigade combat teams as well
as troops from nine NATO countries.
The division is appreciative of its
partnership with Afghan security forces, Mayville said.
“The Afghan security forces are growing
and maturing at a rapid rate,” the general said. “Governance, combined with the
growing security environment, has limited the Taliban’s ability to exert their
negative influence.
“Still, we know this is a tough fight,”
Mayville continued, “but it is a fight we will win, due to our strong
partnership” with the Afghan security forces.
Mayville’s team will work closely with
civilian agencies. U.S. Ambassador Richard Olson, the coordinating director for
development and economic affairs in Kabul, attended the ceremony and gave a
brief interview about the future of the civilian-military partnership in
RC-East.
“The model [civilian-military]
integration here is unlike any we’ve seen before,” Olson said. “The military’s
strides in security, along with its joint work with [Provincial Reconstruction
Teams], have given us the ability to focus on governance and development here.
“We’ve contributed a lot to Afghanistan
in the last 10 years,” Olson added. “Now the challenge is to make sure the
Afghan people have the capacity to continue these successes and projects after
2014.”
No comments:
Post a Comment