Berlusconi Denies Bribing Taliban To Protect Italian Troops

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ALESSANDRA RIZZO | 10/15/09 03:20 PM | AP

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ROME — Italy and NATO on Thursday denied a newspaper report that Italian intelligence secretly paid the Taliban thousands of dollars to keep the peace in an Afghan area under Italian control.

Premier Silvio Berlusconi's office called the report in the Times of London "completely groundless." The Italian defense minister denounced it as "rubbish" and said he wanted to sue the newspaper.

In Kabul, a U.S. spokesman for NATO forces in Afghanistan denied the allegations. "We don't do bribes," Col. Wayne Shanks said. "We don't pay the insurgents."

"The article has unnamed sources, innuendo and hyperbole," Shanks said. "We see no evidence of any of the accusations."

The Times reported that Italy had paid "tens of thousands of dollars" to Taliban commanders and warlords in the Surobi district, east of the capital, Kabul. The newspaper cited Western military officials, including high-ranking officers at NATO, speaking on condition of anonymity.

It accused Rome of failing to inform its allies about the payments and of misleading the French, who took over the Surobi district in mid-2008, thinking the area was quiet and safe. Shortly afterward, French troops were hit with an ambush that killed 10 soldiers and had significant political repercussions back in Paris.

French Defense Ministry spokesman Christophe Prazuck said he had "no information to confirm what has been written in the Times" and stressed that allied troops in Afghanistan share information and enjoy mutual trust.

The Aug. 18, 2008 ambush of the French in a mountain pass was the biggest single combat loss for international forces in Afghanistan in more than three years. The attack, which also injured 21 people, shocked the French public and French officials came under heavy pressure to explain how the troops got caught in such a well-planned and unusually bloody ambush.

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A statement by Berlusconi's office strongly refuted the report.

"The Berlusconi government has never authorized nor has it allowed any form of payment toward members of the Taliban insurgence," the statement said, adding that it does not know of any such payment by the previous government.

Berlusconi won elections in April 2008, replacing a center-left government headed by Romano Prodi.

Speaking through a spokeswoman, Prodi said he "is not aware and was never aware of the events reported by the Times." His defense minister, Arturo Parisi, rejected the claims "with disdain" saying in a statement that they were "groundless."

Parisi "never authorized nor allowed, nor was ever informed of any form of payment to groups of Taliban terrorists," the statement said.

Still, Italy of Values, a small opposition party and former Prodi ally, called on the Berlusconi government to answer questions on the report in Parliament.

Berlusconi's statement noted that the Italian contingent was praised at the time by the ISAF, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force. It quoted the former U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. David McKiernan, as saying the Italians had achieved results in the area, especially in the construction of wells, bridges, schools and through aid to the agriculture.

The statement also noted that in the first half of last year, the Italian contingent suffered several attacks, and one soldier was killed in Surobi in February 2008.

The statement also denied that the U.S. ambassador to Italy had made a formal complaint in June 2008 over alleged payments to the Taliban, as the Times reported. The U.S. Embassy in Rome declined to comment on the report.

Commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan have, however, been doling out money for years to compensate civilians for combat losses and for civilian projects. Shanks said Thursday that commanders do have funds available to use in their area, but insisted the money goes to development projects decided with local leaders or in compensation for battle damage.

"We invest money in local development projects ... We work every day in the field, at the side of the Afghan security forces," said Col. Jacky Fouquereau, a spokesman for the French army in Afghanistan.

Fouquereau said he had no information to confirm the Times report.

Ignazio La Russa, the Italian defense minister, said the benevolent attitude toward Italians serving in Afghanistan was due to the amount of time spent talking to locals and winning their trust.

The report is "offensive to the deaths we have suffered in Afghanistan, to our injured ones and to the daily level of commitment of our soldiers," La Russa told reporters.

Italy has about 2,800 soldiers stationed in Herat and in the capital of Kabul. It has suffered 21 deaths in Afghanistan, including a soldier who died Thursday in a road accident.

La Russa reiterated his condolences to the French but said their loss "can in no way be connected to the behavior of our soldiers."

Shanks said he did not have specifics on the handover between the Italians and the French in the Surobi district. But he said NATO forces spend a lot of time making sure intelligence doesn't get lost, holding debriefings, going on patrols with the departing unit and going over development projects under way.

"We share information constantly with the Italians, the Turks and the French in Kabul, daily, regularly," Prazuck, the French military spokesman, said in Paris. "There is one single strategy, one single chain of command."

The 2008 ambush was the highest French military death toll in an attack in years.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy rushed to Afghanistan to offer support for French troops and his government faced a no-confidence vote in France's parliament over it. That measure failed.

Reports later emerged that the French troops were poorly equipped – running out of ammunition 90 minutes into the battle and having only a single radio that went dead, leaving them unable to call for help. The French military also denied those reports.

"We don't know for sure the truth right now," said Beatrice Gaillet, the mother of a 20-year-old Damien Gaillet, who died in the ambush. "But the news won't bring my son back, no one can."

But she said she does not plan to file a complaint to the French government.

The Times report revived accusations that Italy has a penchant for paying its way out of difficult situations.

Allegations that Rome paid ransom to free its hostages have appeared in cases of kidnappings involving Italians abroad, though governments have denied this. In 2007, Prodi's government came under fire because it negotiated the release of five Taliban militants in exchange for the freedom of an Italian hostage in Afghanistan.

___

Associated Press Writers Angela Charlton and Rachel Kurowski in Paris and Heidi Vogt in Kabul contributed to this report.

ROME — Italy and NATO on Thursday denied a newspaper report that Italian intelligence secretly paid the Taliban thousands of dollars to keep the peace in an Afghan area under Italian control. P...
ROME — Italy and NATO on Thursday denied a newspaper report that Italian intelligence secretly paid the Taliban thousands of dollars to keep the peace in an Afghan area under Italian control. P...
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we have a rule in italy: if berlusconi denies, that's true

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 10/16/2009
- rissole I'm a Fan of rissole 10 fans permalink
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Well there's one for the books. A high ranking US military officer shaking hand with a foreign politician soon to be charged with corruption. Pretty well sums up our Foreign Policy.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 AM on 10/16/2009
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 150 fans permalink

Didn't the "surge" in Iraq work because the military commanders on the ground decided to work with the Sunni militias, and, very importantly, to pay them? Couldn't some reporter have called that a bribe?

It sure would be nice if we could figure out some way of keeping al Qaeda out of Afghanistan that did not involve killing a sizeable portion of the indigenous population. If we can pay the Afghanis $300/month to be on our side, like we did the Sunnis in Iraq, wouldn't that be one heck of a lot cheaper than what we are doing now?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 PM on 10/15/2009
- uneeda I'm a Fan of uneeda 4 fans permalink

silvio wouldn't use bribery would he ?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 PM on 10/15/2009
- S1m0n I'm a Fan of S1m0n 101 fans permalink
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"We don't pay the insurgents"?? Could he choke that out with a straight face? Does he remember that big place just on the other side of iran, where the US has been both paying and arming insurgents for years, and calling it 'the surge'? Or does he mean the other USA?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 10/15/2009
- ImissBush I'm a Fan of ImissBush 35 fans permalink
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we call it

sub contracting
:)

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 10/15/2009
- arvay I'm a Fan of arvay 140 fans permalink
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Why would anyone criticize him for bribing the insurgents?

Petraeus did that in Iraq and he was declared a genius!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 10/15/2009
- niblik I'm a Fan of niblik 27 fans permalink

What has some folks upset is the idea that the Italians didn't fill in their replacements about the bribing and the amount.

However, we don't know yet if this accusation is true or not.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 PM on 10/15/2009
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 144 fans permalink

Lets play the conspiracy card here for a moment.

Rupert Murdoch had a falling out with Berlusconi. Two media barons fighting it out.

Then a Murdoch rag publishes unsupported rumors about Berlusconi and his government.

Do I smell a rat here?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 10/15/2009
- SimonNZ I'm a Fan of SimonNZ 9 fans permalink

Interesting theory.

However Murdoch and Berlusconi share very similar political views, and it's unlikely
Murdoch would seek to damage Berlusconi through a foreign policy disclosure in The Times. It's much more likely he'd publish more embarrassing revelations about Berlusconi cavorting with young hookers in his other publication, The Sun (this is Murdoch's high-class newspaper that always has a photo of a topless female model on page 3).

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 PM on 10/15/2009
- chewie2008 I'm a Fan of chewie2008 15 fans permalink
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Well the U.S. payed off the Sunnis in Iraq,so where is the Beef?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 10/15/2009
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Hey, that was going to be my comment too. Lol

No doubt this is the usual anti-Berlusconi lies coming from the Murdoch rag The Times, but so what if it were true? It worked for us in Iraq to quell the violence in the Anbar deal, if it works for the Italian gov't with the Taliban, more power to them.
It's not like all Talibans are AlQaeda.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 10/15/2009
- chewie2008 I'm a Fan of chewie2008 15 fans permalink
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I let you go first next time.....I promise ;)

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 10/15/2009
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Hey, that was going to be my comment too. Lol

No doubt this is the usual anti-Berlusconi li.es coming from the Mur.doch ra.g The Times, but so what if it were true? It worked for us in Iraq to quell the violence in the An.bar deal, if it works for the Italian gov't with the Tali.ban, more power to them.
It's not like all Tali.bans are AlQ.aeda.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 10/15/2009
- mazzetta I'm a Fan of mazzetta 10 fans permalink
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I agree, even if Berlusconi cannot be trusted in denying, both Us and Brits paid around this or that, so the news doesn't seem the bribery

i think it's more in having kept it secret to French, if things went as reported ...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 10/15/2009

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