WARNEMUENDE - German Defence Minister Peter Struck said Tuesday he foresaw German forces expanding their operations to the Afghan city of Kundus to help protect civilian aid projects.
While visiting a military installation at the Baltic Sea port town of Warnemuende, Struck said it was not realistic that a fact-finding team which has just returned from Kundus would judge against German forces assuming a role in the city.
He said the experiences of the United States forces in the city "would not cause us to say 'no'" to a request for German troops there.
He noted however that the decision was not yet made. Struck said he would be consulting with Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, and that before the troops' mission can be expanded approval must be given by parliament.
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He said it would not be for military protection in the region or entail patrols, but rather protection for civilian helpers involved in humanitarian projects such as building hospitals, schools, water supplies and the administration.
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related
German airline for Kabul flights DUESSELDORF - German air charter company LTU is to resume regular once-weekly flights to Kabul with a flight set for Tuesday evening, an LTU spokesman said.
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Once restored, the flight route would be the first direct civilian aviation link between Europe and Afghanistan in 23 years. LTU says its market is chiefly exiled Afghans living in Germany and Europe as well as personnel of companies and international organisations.
The German airline pilots lobby group Cockpit has strongly criticised the plans for the Kabul flights, citing security questions.
Cockpit is the pilots Union