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Army general calls German Afghan campaign "failure"

Other News Materials 28 November 2008 19:59 (UTC +04:00)

A German army general called Berlin's efforts to help Afghanistan a "failure" Friday and demanded that Berlin roll out development aid that Afghans could see, reported dpa.

The outspoken criticism by Hans-Christoph Ammon, who heads the army's commando section, was almost unprecedented in modern Germany and follows months of growing discontent among soldiers at Berlin policy.

Ammon said that compared to the United States, Germany was spending "far too little" in Afghanistan. He also called on the West to open peace talks with moderate Taliban.

He confirmed his remarks to Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa in Stuttgart, after a speech he gave Wednesday was reported in an area newspaper, the Schwaebische Zeitung.

Germany's efforts to establish a proper police force in Afghanistan "have been a failure," said Ammon, whose KSK secrecy-shrouded special forces troops were originally sent to Afghanistan to fight the Taliban and al-Qaeda.

Serving KSK commanders rarely speak in public, let alone bluntly criticize the government.

In Berlin, a Defence Ministry spokesman said Ammon was merely expressing a personal opinion.

Brigadier-General Ammon said that where Washington had devoted 1 billion dollars to developing the army and police, Germany had spent just 12 million euros (15 million dollars).

"It would have taken us another 82 years to obtain a reasonable police force," he told dpa. He said Berlin did too little public outreach to explain to Germans the purpose of the military deployment to Afghanistan.

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