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Afghanistan is 'greatest' US test Afghanistan is 'greatest' US test
(31 minutes later)
Barack Obama's new administration sees Afghanistan as its "greatest military challenge", US Defence Secretary Robert Gates has told Congress.Barack Obama's new administration sees Afghanistan as its "greatest military challenge", US Defence Secretary Robert Gates has told Congress.
"President Obama has made it clear that the Afghanistan theatre should be our top overseas military priority," Mr Gates said."President Obama has made it clear that the Afghanistan theatre should be our top overseas military priority," Mr Gates said.
Coordination of the fight against the insurgency had been "less than stellar", he added. International coordination of the fight against the insurgency had been "less than stellar", he added.
The defence secretary also warned that new "setbacks" in Iraq were possible.The defence secretary also warned that new "setbacks" in Iraq were possible.
"There may be hard days ahead for our troops [in Iraq]," he said while noting that violence there had remained low."There may be hard days ahead for our troops [in Iraq]," he said while noting that violence there had remained low.
And he stressed that in Afghanistan, as in Iraq, there was "no purely military solution in Afghanistan". He said the Pentagon would probably be in a position to deploy three combat brigades to Afghanistan by mid-summer but infrastructure would have to be expanded before a fourth could be sent in.
"It is also clear that we have not had enough troops to provide a baseline level of security in some of the most dangerous areas - a vacuum that increasingly has been filled by the Taliban," he added. Al-Qaeda policy 'unchanged'
Mr Gates was questioned by the Senate Armed Services Committee about future policy on al-Qaeda, the militant network which claimed responsibility for the 9/11 attacks on America. He was also questioned by the Senate Armed Services Committee about future policy on al-Qaeda, the militant network which claimed responsibility for the 9/11 attacks on America.
He replied that the policy remained that the US would "go after al-Qaeda wherever al-Qaeda is". He replied that the policy remained that the US would "go after al-Qaeda wherever al-Qaeda is", and confirmed that the government of Pakistan had been informed of that intention.
US drones fired missiles into Pakistan's north-western regions of North and South Waziristan on Friday, killing at least 14 people, according to intelligence officials and residents.
It was the first such attack on the area, a stronghold of al-Qaeda and Taleban militants, since Mr Obama took over from George W Bush.
'Dangerous vacuum'
Mr Gates stressed that in Afghanistan, as in Iraq, there was "no purely military solution".
Insurgents have been able to strike inside the capital Kabul
"While this will undoubtedly be a long and difficult fight, we can attain what I believe should be among our strategic objectives: an Afghan people who do not provide a safe haven for al-Qaeda, reject the rule of the Taleban and support the legitimate government that they elected and in which they have a stake," he said.
Reiterating a long-held US appeal for its allies to commit more combat troops, he said that parts of Afghanistan had come increasingly under insurgent control.
"It is also clear that we have not had enough troops to provide a baseline level of security in some of the most dangerous areas - a vacuum that increasingly has been filled by the Taleban," he said.
The US currently has about 34,000 troops in Afghanistan and is seeking to double that number. Each of the brigades due to be deployed has about 3,500 soldiers.