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US to send more troops to Afghanistan this year
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-07-03 09:58

WASHINGTON - Grappling with a record death toll in an overshadowed war, President George W. Bush promised Wednesday to send more US troops into Afghanistan by year's end. He conceded that June was a "tough month" in the nearly 7-year-old war.

US President George W. Bush talks about his upcoming trip to Japan for the G8 summit, in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, July 2, 2008. [Agencies] 

In fact, it was the deadliest month for US troops in Afghanistan since the conflict began.

"One reason why there have been more deaths is because our troops are taking the fight to a tough enemy, an enemy who doesn't like our presence there because they don't like the idea of America denying safe haven (to terrorists)," Bush told reporters. "Of course there's going to be resistance."

Bush said it was a tough month too for the Taliban fighters. The former ruling Islamic militants have rebounded with deadly force since their overthrow 6 years ago by US-led troops.

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More US and NATO troops have died in the past two months in Afghanistan than in Iraq, a place with triple the number of US and allied forces.

In June, 28 Americans died in Afghanistan. That was the highest monthly total of the war, which began in October 2001.

For the full US-led coalition in Afghanistan the death toll was 46, also the highest of the war.

Bush confronted the grim direction of the Afghanistan conflict during a sun-splashed appearance in the Rose Garden of the White House. The president used the event to promote his agenda for a coming meeting in Japan of the Group of Eight industrialized countries, then spoke about Iran, climate change and gasoline prices in a short session with reporters.

The Pentagon predicts the pace of attacks in Afghanistan by a resurgent Taliban is likely to rise this year, despite US-led efforts to capture major leaders.

"We're going to increase troops by 2009," Bush said, without offering details of exactly when or how many.

It amounted to a reiteration by Bush of a promised buildup of US troops in Afghanistan. He said coalition forces have doubled in size over two years and pledged that the twin strategy of fighting extremists and supporting Afghanistan's civil development "is going to work."

The US Defense Department's top military officer said Wednesday that if security continues to improve in Iraq he is hopeful he will begin to have troops available to shift to Afghanistan by the end of this year. Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said more troops are essential to stem the violence.

"The Taliban and their supporters have, without question, grown more effective and more aggressive in recent weeks, and as the casualty figures clearly demonstrate," Mullen said. He added that "there's no easy solution, and there will be no quick fix."

In terms of public attention, the war in Afghanistan has been obscured by the far costlier and deadlier one in Iraq.

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