John Key
Prime Minister John Key is not ruling out future Special
Airforce Service (SAS) deployments to Afghanistan.
Questions have been raised about the SAS timeline following
last week's death of Corporal Douglas Grant, New Zealand's
third soldier to die in Afghanistan in the last two years.
Cpl Grant, 41, died after being shot by an insurgent on
Friday during an operation to rescue hostages at the British
Council cultural centre, which was under attack by the
Taliban.
Speaking to reporters at a post-Cabinet press conference this
afternoon, Mr Key said his expectation was still for the SAS
to come home in March, but that he could not rule out sending
them back.
"Our plan at this point is to bring them home in March 2012,
we think they will have had two and a half years there and
done a tremendous job, I think that's about in line with our
expectations of how long that they will be there," Mr Key
said.
"But, you know, we always take these things on a case by case
basis, I can't rule out that they won't be deployed in
another rotation at some time in the future, but that's not
something we've planned at the moment."
Mr Key rejected accusations he downplayed the dangers facing
New Zealand soldiers in Afghanistan when troops were sent in
2009.
Asked whether the situation was now more dangerous, Mr Key
said the terrorist tactics were becoming more focused on
high-profile sites to maximise international attention.
"So it's more changing in nature, rather than becoming more
dangerous," Mr Key said.
The SAS were still primarily serving a mentoring role to the
Afghan Crisis Response Unit, preparing the team to take over
when foreign forces left the country.
Mr Key said Friday's operation was not an exception.
"The CRU ran that operation, there were about 100 CRU members
involved in that operation, the New Zealanders did play a
mentoring role, it started getting a bit nastier more were
called in as backup, but the command of that whole operation
was with the CRU," he said.
"My understanding is, just talking to SAS members as I did at
the weekend, there's certainly a substantial increase in
capability coming from the CRU."
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