NATO “a corpse” fumes former Canada military boss

OTTAWA,  (Reuters) – The splits inside NATO over the  Afghan war have turned the alliance into a rotting corpse that  will be virtually impossible to revive, says the former head of  Canada’s armed forces.  

General Rick Hillier also said the 28-member alliance was  “dominated by jealousies and small, vicious political battles”  and bemoaned its “lack of cohesion, clarity and  professionalism” at the start of the Afghan mission. 

Hillier made the angry comments in a new book called “A  Soldier First: Bullets, Bureaucrats and the Politics of War”,  which was purchased by Reuters yesterday ahead of its  scheduled publication date next week. Hiller stepped down as  chief of the defense staff last year.  

Canada often complains that its 2,700 soldiers in southern  Afghanistan are bearing the brunt of the war while other NATO  members insist their troops be stationed in more peaceful parts  of the country and limit what they can do. 

“Afghanistan has revealed that NATO has reached the stage  where it is a corpse decomposing and somebody’s going to have  to perform a Frankenstein-like life-giving act by breathing  some lifesaving air through those rotten lips into those  putrescent lungs or the alliance will be done,” Hillier wrote.  

“Any major setback in Afghanistan will see it off to the  cleaners, and unless the alliance can snatch victory out of  feeble efforts, it’s not going to be long in existence in its  present form.”  

So far, 131 Canadian soldiers have died in Afghanistan. The  combat mission is due to end in 2011 and Ottawa says it has no  plans to extend it.  Hillier, who commanded the NATO-led International Security  Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan from February to August  2004, said he was alarmed to discover the extent to which the  body had split into factions.