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Army head calls for more troops | Army head calls for more troops |
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More troops are needed in the Afghan province of Helmand to provide security, the outgoing head of the British Army has told the BBC. | More troops are needed in the Afghan province of Helmand to provide security, the outgoing head of the British Army has told the BBC. |
General Sir Richard Dannatt said "more boots" were needed but it did not matter whether they were British, American or Afghan troops. | General Sir Richard Dannatt said "more boots" were needed but it did not matter whether they were British, American or Afghan troops. |
His comments come after 15 UK soldiers were killed this month and following a row over resources for British troops. | His comments come after 15 UK soldiers were killed this month and following a row over resources for British troops. |
Number 10 said it had called on other Nato nations to provide more soldiers. | Number 10 said it had called on other Nato nations to provide more soldiers. |
On his last trip to Afghanistan before retiring this month, Gen Dannatt told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "I have said before, we can have effect where we have boots on the ground. | |
"I don't mind whether the feet in those boots are British, American or Afghan, but we need more to have the persistent effect to give the people (of Helmand) confidence in us. | "I don't mind whether the feet in those boots are British, American or Afghan, but we need more to have the persistent effect to give the people (of Helmand) confidence in us. |
"That is the top line and the bottom line." | "That is the top line and the bottom line." |
He was speaking the day after the bodies of eight British servicemen killed in Afghanistan - three of them teenagers - were repatriated to Britain. | |
American helicopter | |
Asked why he was flown around Afghanistan in an American helicopter he said it was because he did not have a British one. | |
"There is a pool and we share the assets, but we have got to put as much into the pool as we take out." | |
FROM THE TODAY PROGRAMME More from Today programme | FROM THE TODAY PROGRAMME More from Today programme |
On whether Britain's 9,100-strong force in Afghanistan has the equipment it needs, he said: "We are building our resources up. | |
"In terms of equipment, we have got a plan to increase the amount of campaign equipment we've got. | |
"It has probably not moved as fast as I would have liked it to have moved, but we are increasing the numbers. | "It has probably not moved as fast as I would have liked it to have moved, but we are increasing the numbers. |
"I would like to get more energy behind it if we possibly can." | "I would like to get more energy behind it if we possibly can." |
Downing Street said Britain was calling on other Nato countries to provide more troops to Afghanistan. | |
The prime minister's spokesman said: "We do need to have more of an effort from other Nato members. | |
"The PM's view is we need to see more burden-sharing." | |
The government had kept the level of British troops under review, with the number increasing from 7,800 last year, to more than 9,000 now, said the spokesman. | |
Prime Minister Gordon Brown has already responded to criticism over resources for UK forces by insisting they are the best equipped that they have been in 40 years. | |
Conservative leader David Cameron has attacked the "scandal" of helicopter shortages and accused the government of the "dereliction of duty" in under-equipping the armed forces. | |
And Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg criticised British strategy in Afghanistan as "over-ambitious in aim and under-resourced in practice". | And Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg criticised British strategy in Afghanistan as "over-ambitious in aim and under-resourced in practice". |
The Conservatives have also warned of a "ticking time bomb" of mental illness facing veterans of the war in Afghanistan. | The Conservatives have also warned of a "ticking time bomb" of mental illness facing veterans of the war in Afghanistan. |
The party said the intense fighting, combined with inadequate mental health support, would leave record numbers suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. | The party said the intense fighting, combined with inadequate mental health support, would leave record numbers suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. |