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Video: Blair on NATO, Afghanistan, Middle East

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    >>> former british prime minister tony blair joins us exclusively. good to see you. great to have you here.

    >> thanks, matt.

    >> lester holt was reporting the insider attacks on the rise in afghanistan , the fear that we may leave behind a situation a lot less secure than we anticipated. does it give us a hint of what's to come after a dozen years of fighting? could we say chaos return to afghanistan ?

    >> well, it describes the challenge, for sure. first of all, if i may, i'd like to pay tribute though to your armed forces , to the service men and women who serve in afghanistan and to give my deep sympathy to the families of those who have lost their loved ones . we know what it's like from our side had britain as well. we've lost over 400 soldiers in the course of the campaign in afghanistan . and, look, it's very difficult when people see these insider attacks. they say, well, is it all worth it? i think we have to go back 11 years to realize why it is we were in afghanistan , to realize we actually have made our country safer as a result of this, but to understand that it's going it be an ongoing and difficult struggle. it's true that there are those who are insiders who are committing these crimes, but it's also true there are afghan forces doing the job they should be doing.

    >> i hate to put it on a scale of 1 to 10 question, a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the taliban is back in power after we leave and 1 being it's not going to happen, where is it?

    >> i don't believe they will come back in power. i think that we shouldn't underestimate the degree to which, for example, your surge, where you put some 30,000 troops into kandahar and helmand which are the most difficult provinces, actually they have had an impact. you know, what we're engaged in in afghanistan is a struggle in which there will be people that will carry on trying to do their very worst to disrupt the progress that have country, but it's important to understand that there are also afghans fighting on our side.

    >> let me ask you about things, the images we've seen around the world, the middle east , the horn of africa over the last couple of weeks, protests against the united states . what is behind what seems to be this new wave of anti-americanism, in your opinion?

    >> well, i think, you know, if i can say one thing about america and the way it's viewed in this part of the world. i've just come back from my 88th visit to the middle east since leaving office. if i were you in america, i would not worry about being loved. that's not your role in the world, right? your role is to be strong and you are strong. what you have to understand in these circumstances there's two groups struggling for what's going on in the world. you have anti-american protesters burning the flag, saying terrible things and killing american people and you also have in libya, for example, after the tragic death of your ambassador there, thousands of people coming out protesting against the killers and demanding action taken against them so, you know, in the end, you've got to see this as a long struggle in which we've got to be on the side of the decent people, and there are decent people out there.

    >> but we do worry what the result of the arab spring has been. mohamed morsi, the new president of egypt, gave an interview in advance of him coming to new york this week, and he said this. by backing dictatorial governments in the past, the quote, successive american administrations essentially purchased with american taxpayer money the dislike, if not the hatred, of the peoples of the region. how do you feel about that?

    >> well, i feel about that that, you know, there are actually most of the governments of the world dealt with, for example, president mubarak in egypt and by the way for perfectly sensible reasons, my government did as well. look, again, what you will find in all of these countries is they have thrown off a lot of these repressive dictatorships, but they are now having to learn that democracy isn't about just a way of voting, it's a way of thinking, you know, and if they want to make progress, we've got to help them but also challenge them to realize that the test of a democracy is not just how the majority win but how they then treat the minority, how they treat, for example, people of different religious faiths to their own

    >> i want to just end on a question that's near and dear to your heart. you're here for climate week as well. we've had a crazy week, year in this country of extreme weather . are you seeing around the world the kind of motivation and will that's necessary to, a, admit that there's a problem and then address the problem?

    >> well, not enough frankly. i mean, i think we've go the to be very clear about this. i know we've got all these economic problems to deal with, but this climate issue is real, and we are very responsible for future generations if we don't deal with it and we should rover a sense of urgency about it

    >> i hope we will. former british prime minister tony blair , always nice to have you in new york.

    >> thank you.

    >> nice when you stop by.

    >> thank you.

By
TODAY contributor
updated 9/24/2012 9:57:30 AM ET 2012-09-24T13:57:30

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair expressed doubt Monday that Taliban forces will resume power in Afghanistan once the last of the U.S.-led troops withdraw from the region.

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“I don’t believe they will come back in power,” he said on TODAY, crediting the 30,000 additional troops President Obama sent to Afghanistan at the end of 2009. The surge had significant impact on shoring up security in two of the most war-torn provinces, Kandahar and Helmand, Blair said.

“What we’re engaged in Afghanistan is a struggle in which there will be people that will carry on trying to do their very worst to disrupt the progress of that country, but it’s important to understand there are also Afghans fighting on our side,” said Blair, envoy for the Quartet on the Middle East.

Video: Top US general in Afghanistan speaks out (on this page)

Blair also dismissed the latest increase of anti-American sentiment being felt throughout the Middle East, mainly in the form of protests.

“If I were you in America, I would not worry about being loved. That’s not your role in the world,” he told TODAY’s Matt Lauer. “Your role is to be strong, and you are strong.”

He pointed out that in Libya, where U.S. diplomats were killed in recent protests, thousands of area residents also are speaking out against the violence and demanding prosecution for those responsible for the death of the Americans.

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Video: TODAY in Afghanistan (on this page)

Democracy takes time, especially for nations that have been ruled for decades by oppressive dictatorships, he said.

“In the end, you have this as a long struggle in which we’ve got to be on the side of decent people, and there are decent people out there,” he said.

Blair is in New York to help kick off Climate Week. He said the world needs to get serious about curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

“This climate issue is real, and we’re very responsible for future generations if we don’t deal with it,” he said. “We should recover a sense of urgency about it.”

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