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Afghanistan promised support beyond 2014 pullout

The United States and other nations have vowed to keep supporting Afghanistan after most foreign forces leave the country in 2014, as the nation faces an enduring Taliban-led insurgency and possible financial collapse.

Pakistan boycott casts pall over international gathering

Afghan President Hamid Karzai leaves the podium after addressing the Afghanistan conference on Monday, in Bonn, Germany. (Oliver Berg/AFP/Getty Images)

The United States and other nations vowed Monday to keep supporting Afghanistan after most foreign forces leave the country in 2014, as the nation faces an enduring Taliban-led insurgency and possible financial collapse.

"The United States is prepared to stand with the Afghan people for the long haul," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told a global conference in Bonn, Germany,on Afghanistan's future that was overshadowed by the absence of key regional player Pakistan.

'We will need your steadfast support for another decade.' Afghan President Hamid Karzai

The international community has "much to lose if the country again becomes a source of terrorism and instability," she added.

The Bonn conference is focused on the transfer of security responsibilities from international forces to Afghan security forces during the next three years, long-term prospects for international aid and a possible political settlement with the Taliban.

Clinton stressed that in return for continued support the Afghans must live up to their commitments "on taking difficult decisions to embrace reform, lead in their own defence and strengthen an inclusive democracy rooted in the rule of law."

Canada joins in pledgeof support

About 100 countries and international organizations are represented among the 1,000 conference delegates, including some 60 foreign ministers. The attendees are hoping to agree on a set of mutual binding commitments under which Afghanistan would promise reforms and work toward goals such as good governance, with donors and international organizations pledging long-term assistance in return to ensure the country's viability beyond 2014.

Canada is joining its American and European partners in pledging long-term solidarity with Afghanistan. But Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird can't put a dollar figure on Canada's continued development assistance beyond 2014

Canada halved its yearly aid spending to Afghanistan with the end of the combat mission in Kandahar earlier this year, and will now contribute about $100 million a year for three years.

Although Baird wouldn't commit to a dollar figure, he says Canada has obviously made a major commitment to development in Afghanistan and will continue to stand by them.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai pleaded with the international community not to ignore the country after 2014, when the West seeks to transfer security duties to Afghan forces.

"Together we have spent blood and treasure in fighting terrorism," Karzai said. "Your continued solidarity, your commitment and support will be crucial so that we can consolidate our gains and continue to address the challenges that remain. We will need your steadfast support for at least another decade."

Afghanistan is economically dependent on foreign aid and spending related to the huge military presence, and the country seeks assurance that donor nations will help fill the gap after most forces leave by 2015.

Although donor nations will not commit to specific figures at the one-day session Monday, they will sign up to the principle that economic and other advances in Afghanistan since the ouster of the Taliban government in 2001 should be safeguarded with continued funding.

Afghanistan estimates it will need outside contributions of roughly $10 billion in 2015, or slightly less than half the country's annual gross national product, mostly to pay for its security forces, then slated to number about 350,000.

Pakistan is a central player in regional efforts to improve trade and strengthen its weak economies. But its boycott has cast a pall over the session, because it points out that nation's influence in Afghanistan and its ability to play the spoiler.

Pakistan is seen as instrumental to ending the Taliban-led insurgency in Afghanistan because of its links to militant groups and its unwillingness, from the U.S. and NATO perspective, to drive insurgents from safe havens on its soil where they regroup and rearm.

Border incident prompts Pakistan boycott

Pakistan cancelled its participation to protest last month's NATO air assault, carried out from Afghan territory, that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers. The deaths fed the popular perspective in Pakistan that the U.S. and NATO, not the Taliban, are Pakistan's principal enemies.

"No one is more interested than the United States in getting to the bottom of what happened in the border incident," Clinton said with an edge in her voice. She has called the deaths tragic and pledged a thorough investigation, but Pakistan rebuffed her entreaties, as recently as Saturday, to reconsider and attend the conference.

Pakistan's army accused NATO of a "deliberate act of aggression," an assertion the Pentagon hotly denied. Pakistan has received billions in U.S. aid since 2001, largely in expectation of co-operation against militants.

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani later told The Associated Press in Lahore, Pakistan, that his country remains committed to working with Afghanistan to bring insurgent leaders into talks with the government.

"I think we have evolved some mechanisms, and we are ready to co-operate," he said, referring to meetings with Afghanistan's military and intelligence chiefs on a framework for talks.

Afghanistan's western neighbour Iran, in turn, joined the conference, and Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said the country stands ready to support Afghanistan and "welcomes the departure of the international military."

Salehi said real stability for the country can only be achieved through the political process of reconciliation, and condemned the idea of "foreign military bases in Afghanistan" beyond 2014.

The U.S. had once hoped to use the Bonn gathering to announce news about the prospect for peace talks with the Taliban, making it a showcase for political reconciliation, but Afghan and U.S. outreach efforts have not borne fruit and no prominent Taliban representatives were attending the conference.

The reconciliation efforts suffered a major setback after the September assassination of former Afghan president Burhanuddin Rabbani, who was leading the Afghan government's effort to broker peace with the insurgents.

The final declaration of the Bonn conference is expected to outline broad principles for political reconciliation with the Taliban, a project that several leading participants in the conference increasingly predict will outlast the NATO timeline for withdrawal in 2014.

"The road ahead will remain stony and difficult. It will require endurance and tenacity," German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said.

Violence in Afghanistan is up sharply this year, and has spread to the once-peaceful north of the country. And widespread corruption is bedevilling attempts to create a viable Afghan government and institutions to take over when the U.S. and NATO leave.

With files from The Canadian Press