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THE STANS
US must close Kyrgyz base in 2014: president-elect
by Staff Writers
Bishkek (AFP) Nov 1, 2011


The United States will have to shut down the base it currently uses in Kyrgyzstan for support operations in Afghanistan, the Central Asian republic's president-elect said on Tuesday.

Kyrgyz Prime Minister Almazbek Atambayev, who was elected president of the strategic nation by an overwhelming majority on Sunday, said the United States will have to leave the Manas base after its lease expires in 2014.

"Our country will honour all its international agreements, but we have warned the US embassy that they will have to close the base in 2014," Atambayev told reporters.

The former Soviet republic is the world's only nation to house both a Russian and a US military base, reflecting a recent rivalry between Moscow and Washington in the energy-rich but turbulent region.

Now officially called the Manas Transit Centre, the base leased by the United States is located at a civilian airport on the outskirts of the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek.

NATO has mapped out a strategy to withdraw all its troops from Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

Atambayev, whose victory may still be challenged by his opponents, said he did not believe such bases provided long-term security for Kyrgyzstan.

"We are ready to create civilian transit centres, but not military bases, with the US, Russia or any other interested country," he said.

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Rogue US army unit leader saw Afghans as 'savages'
Joint Base Lewis-Mcchord, Washington (AFP) Oct 31, 2011
The ringleader of a rogue US army unit accused of killing Afghan civilians for sport treated the locals like "savages," a court martial heard Monday. The so-called "kill team" led by Staff Sergeant Calvin Gibbs was "out of control," prosecutors added as grisly photos of soldiers posing with a corpse were shown in court. Gibbs, who sat expressionless in a tiny courtroom where the week-lon ... read more


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