By DPA
Berlin : Germany Friday turned down a request from the US to send combat troops to southern Afghanistan, where most of the fighting with the Taliban and Al Qaeda is taking place.
Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung said Germany would continue with its current mandate providing for the deployment of up to 3,500 troops, mostly in the relatively peaceful north of the country.
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier and government spokesman Ulrich Wilhelm also ruled out a change in the German commitment, which was approved by the German parliament in October 2007.
The officials were responding to a letter by US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates requesting German participation in a 3,200-man force to beef up the NATO presence in Afghanistan.
Gates’ letter asked Germany to consider a new mandate which could allow thousands more troops to be sent to Afghanistan, with some deployed to the more dangerous south.
It also requests Germany to provide helicopter support and paratroopers for the nearly 37,000-strong NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).
Germany currently has 3,200 troops in Afghanistan as well as six Tornado surveillance jets.
The letter, which was also sent to other NATO allies, is expected to be high on the agenda at an informal meeting of NATO defence ministers in Vilnius next week.
The Pentagon said earlier this week that it would urge NATO allies to send more troops to southern Afghanistan.
The reluctance of European NATO allies to contribute extra soldiers or limit their role to peacekeeping missions has frustrated the US, and most recently Canada.
The German government has been considering a NATO request for combat troops for a Quick Reaction Force in northern Afghanistan to replace a 350-strong Norwegian force that leaves in July.