Merkel says Germany at war in Afghanistan

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BERLIN – German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Saturday for the first time that German troops were fighting a war in Afghanistan, as she addressed them on a surprise visit to the country, reporters with her said.
Her office said that she had arrived in Kunduz in northern Afghanistan to meet German troops serving there ahead of the Christmas celebrations.
She then went on to Mazar-i-Sharif for talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and the US commander of international forces fighting Taliban insurgents, General David Petraeus.
“What we have here is not just a warlike situation,” she told the troops in Kunduz. “You are involved in combat as in war,” she said. “This is a new experience,” Merkel added on her third visit to Afghanistan while in office. “We have heard such things from our parents talking of World War II, but that was different because Germany was the aggressor.”
Thanking the troops for their service, she said, “We know that it’s something very dangerous, and what you have experienced will weigh on many of you well after you return from operations.”
Their mission in Afghanistan also served Germany, Merkel said. “Without it we couldn’t live as peacefully, and people must know that. They sometimes view this operation with scepticism, but despite everything they are proud of you.”
Merkel was accompanied by Defence Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, who also visited Afghanistan last weekend with his wife to meet troops, and army chief General Volker Wieker.
Germany has 4,800 soldiers serving in the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, most of them in the north of the country, but their deployment is not popular at home.
The army announced Saturday that a 21-year-old soldier had died from bullet wounds sustained at a checkpoint. The spokesman said the death was an accident.
It took to 45 the total number of German servicemen to have lost their lives in Afghanistan in the international mission there. On Thursday German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said Berlin would start reducing troop numbers in Afghanistan by the end of next year with a view to pulling out of the country completely by 2014.
“At that point, there should be no more German troops” in the war-torn country, he told parliament to prolonged applause.
At a crunch summit in Lisbon last month, the nations of the NATO-led force agreed with President Karzai to begin putting the battlefield under his control in early 2011, moving Western troops to a support role by 2014.