UNITED NATIONS — Peacekeepers will be dispatched to Kabul this weekend under a U.N. Security Council resolution approved Thursday that authorizes an international force to safeguard the area around the Afghan capital over the next six months.
The resolution, passed unanimously after two weeks of closed-door debate, formally endorses Britain's offer "to take the lead in organizing and commanding" the force. An initial contingent of about 200 British troops has begun arriving in Kabul before the new interim government is sworn in on Saturday. "The United Kingdom is ready to go," Jeremy Greenstock, British ambassador to the United Nations, said after the vote.
Deliberately not mentioned in the resolution is the subordinate relationship of U.N.-authorized peacekeepers to U.S. forces in the country.
The British government, in a letter to the Security Council on Wednesday, said that although its mission would have a distinct mandate and command structure, the Pentagon should retain ultimate control over foreign forces in Afghanistan.
The British also said they would lead the peacekeeping mission only until April 30, when their troops would be withdrawn. Some American forces are expected to remain well beyond that point.
Washington had argued for some form of coordinating power over all allied troops in the country in order to avoid inadvertent casualties or even confrontations among friendly forces.
"We need to make sure that the international assistance force does not in any way interfere with our efforts to root out the remaining elements of Al Qaeda and the Taliban," U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte said Thursday.
There must be "a clear-cut division of labor between the two forces," Negroponte said, with peacekeepers confined to security responsibilities in and around Kabul while American forces wage war elsewhere in the country.
The Security Council also declined to specify the size of the peacekeeping force, an issue of considerable tension with the new regime in Kabul. The Afghans favor a limited armed foreign presence, numbering in the hundreds, but European nations are offering to contribute 5,000 or more troops. France, Italy and Spain all have offered to provide soldiers, along with Canada, Turkey and Jordan.
The German government, which risked its parliamentary majority to secure support for sending troops to Afghanistan, was unwilling for domestic reasons to submit to formal U.S. command over the mission.