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More Australian Troops Heading to Afghanistan
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=121FFBF:415DB6A Two hundred forty
soldiers and engineers will be deployed in July to work alongside
Dutch forces to help with reconstruction efforts





In this photo released by the Australian Defense Department, an
Australian Surveillance Reconnaissance Vehicle (SRV) patrols outside
the perimeter of a forward operating base in Afghanistan (File
photo)Australia increasing its troop levels in Afghanistan. Two
hundred forty soldiers and engineers will be deployed in July to work
alongside Dutch forces to help with reconstruction efforts.

The new deployment will almost double Australia's military presence in
Afghanistan.

Two hundred forty Australian combat soldiers, army tradesmen and
engineers will head to the troubled country in July, to join the
approximately 300 Australians already there.

The new contingent will work alongside a Dutch-led reconstruction team
in Afghanistan's Oruzgan Province, helping to build roads and
irrigation systems.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard admits the mission is dangerous,
but says is necessary to help democracy take root in Afghanistan.

"There is danger. The situation in Afghanistan still remains quite
fraught," he said. "This is a risky mission and it's a reminder to all
Australians again of the risks that are undertaken by our men and
women when they go overseas."

Mr. Howard has insisted that rebuilding Afghanistan and tackling
extremism there are key parts in the global war on terror.

Australia has been a loyal supporter of Washington's efforts in the
region.

In 2001 Canberra sent 1,500 troops to Afghanistan, including special
forces, to join the U.S.-led invasion that toppled the former Taleban
regime.

The action was a direct response to the terrorist attacks in New York
and Washington in September 2001. The Taleban was accused of harboring
al-Qaida, which used Afghanistan to train Islamic militants from all
over the world.

Australia later withdrew its soldiers, only to send 190 elite
commandos back to Afghanistan in 2005 to counter growing rebel
attacks.

Taleban and al-Qaida insurgents are blamed for attacks that have
resulted in the deaths of 30 foreign soldiers in Afghanistan this
year, most of them American.

Members of the Afghan government have also been targeted by a wave of
roadside and suicide bombings, as well as missile attacks and
assassinations.