
SPERWAN GHAR, Afghanistan - Canada's senior commander in Afghanistan says a recent series of operations in the Panjwaii district of Kandahar has given troops momentum in their fight against the Taliban.
The Canadian manoeuvres were timed to coincide with the U.S.-led Operation Dragon Strike, which got underway in the Arghandab and Zhari districts of Kandahar last week.
Brig.-Gen. Dean Milner says the operations have given a new sense of security to villagers in Panjwaii.
He made the comments during a recent two-day tour of Canada's frontline positions ....
KANDAHAR -- While NATO has already suffered its worst year for deaths in Afghanistan, Canada's fatality rate has dropped more than 40%, according to calculations by Postmedia News.
An analysis derived from statistics kept by iCasualties.org and other sources shows 14 Canadians have died so far this year, compared to 25 during the first nine months of last year, with the rate of decline accelerating throughout the so-called summer fighting season.
Over the past four months, for example, six Canadians have died. There were 13 Canadian deaths during the same four months in 2009, when fighting usually peaks.
"We've been very aggressive with some specific operations during the summer," said Brig.-Gen. Dean Milner in explaining the dramatic drop in Canadian deaths. "There has been a huge increase in Afghan troops and police, and that has kept insurgents off balance.
"For example, there have been operations to interdict the freedom of movement of IEDs." ....
MONTREAL, QUEBEC--(Marketwire - Oct. 1, 2010) - Canadian Helicopters Income Fund (TSX:CHL.UN) (the "Fund"), the largest helicopter transportation services company operating in Canada, is pleased to announce that it has been advised it has been awarded additional work in Afghanistan by the United States Transportation Command ("USTRANSCOM"). This new contract, similar to previous awards, entails the movement of supplies and passengers to military forward operating locations, and involves the provision of two crewed and supported Sikorsky S61 heavy category and four Bell 212 medium category helicopters. One of the aircraft will be provided from the existing fleet of Canadian Helicopters, and five will be acquired ....
Suspected militants in Pakistan set fire to more than two dozen tankers carrying fuel for NATO troops in Afghanistan on Friday, officials said, a day after three soldiers were killed in a cross-border NATO air strike.
Angered by repeated incursions by NATO helicopters over the past week, Pakistan has blocked a supply route for coalition troops in Afghanistan.
Pakistan is a crucial ally for the United States in its efforts to stabilize Afghanistan, but analysts say border incursions and disruptions in NATO supplies underline growing tensions in the relationship.
A senior Pakistani intelligence official said the border incursions could lead to a "total snapping of relations".
Senior local officials blamed "extremists" for the attack on the tankers in the southern town of Shikarpur. About 12 people, their faces covered, opened fire with small arms into the air to scare away the drivers and then set fire to 27 tankers.
"Some of them have been completely destroyed and others partially. But there is no loss of human life," Shikarpur police chief Abdul Hameed Khoso told Reuters.
Police arrested 10 people after the attack, including five netted from a raid on an Islamic seminary, or madrassa ....
I actually filed the bottom story to the National Post, but I don’t think they had room or time to run it. It’s written news style for publishing, but I didn’t bother modifying it for the blog.
I also rode in a Cougar to forward operating base Camp Nathan Smith today to see Canadian police mentor Afghans, as well as Sarposa prison in Kandahar City. Scroll to the bottom for those pictures...
![]()
An Afghan mentor teaches ANA soldiers from all over the country in a classroom about topography. Oct 4, 2010. Photo: Adrian MacNair.
KABUL – Under the guidance and assistance of Canadian military mentors, the Junior Officer Command and Staff training program in Kabul [JOCSC] is expected to be able to produce over 200 senior officers per year by 2011.
Although the mentoring is done by Canadian, German and Turkish officers, JOCSC is managed by Major General Kaz Mohammad and Colonel Abdul Aziz in keeping with the “Afghan-led” mandate of development and governance.
The Junior Officer college program was established a year ago by Canada using mentoring and training techniques that can be used to train highly skilled military leaders for the Afghan National Army [ANA]. The program uses the most modern counter-insurgency training in a two-part course that spans a total of 20 weeks.
The first part of the course, at six weeks, is composed of 50 students at present and will train ANA soldiers to become company commanders. The second part of the course, 14 weeks, consists of 188 students who can go on to be operations officers at a Kandak [battalion] level.
JOCSC initially had much difficulty in producing quality officers to be redeployed in combat against the insurgents, but expansion and construction has allowed exponential growth in the college. Derek Fraser, head of the construction team at the college, said that the Canadian government has invested $6.1 million in the expansion facility, slated for completion June 7, 2011 [emphasis added]...
Reporting from Kandahar, Afghanistan
Advertisement
On a recent bell-clear autumn afternoon a few miles outside Afghanistan's second-largest city, villagers listened courteously as a U.S. military officer, speaking through an interpreter whose grasp of the local language seemed shaky, exhorted them to let Afghan police or American soldiers know if the Taliban came to town.
Nodding in agreement amid the group were three men in beards, turbans and sandals who looked, dressed and talked like the other villagers. They were Taliban.
"They were standing right there with us, and everyone was too scared to say anything," a farmer named Farid, who grows pomegranates in the Arghandab district, northwest of Kandahar, said as he described the encounter last month. Soon afterward, fearing both insurgents and the presence of foreign troops, he and his family fled.
Together with its outlying districts, Kandahar — a cacophonous, chaotic metropolis of more than 1 million people — is the focal point of NATO's most ambitious military offensive of the 9-year-old war. Long delayed but now gathering in intensity, the campaign's outcome is described as pivotal to the Western war effort.
North Atlantic Treaty Organization officials characterize the ongoing confrontation as the inexorable tightening of a noose around the Taliban, an enemy depicted as increasingly beleaguered and on the run. In interviews and daily news releases, the coalition tells of firefights in which insurgents are wiped out by airstrikes, carefully plotted night raids by elite Afghan and U.S. troops that pick off Taliban ringleaders one by one, and enhanced security for villagers and townspeople.
But for Kandaharis, both urban dwellers and villagers from the surrounding farmlands, the narrative is somewhat different. They speak of lingering fear and deep skepticism about the NATO operation, despite what they acknowledge to be a decline in overt violence such as suicide bombings and assassinations in the city itself.
Taliban militants, they say, retain near-total freedom of movement inside and outside Kandahar, as long as they stash weapons in a widely scattered network of caches rather than carrying them around. "Night letters," the insurgents' dreaded warning missives often aimed at civil servants and prominent tribal elders, still arrive with clocklike regularity. Most disappointingly, local people say, the improved government services touted as equal in importance to the military drive have largely failed to materialize...
In conversations with Kandaharis, the perceived impermanence of the Western presence is a constant theme — coupled with the Taliban's ability to fade away and then reappear [emphasis added]. Even in areas declared secured by the foreign forces, the insurgents simply bide their time, and then filter back — much as they did in Marja in neighboring Helmand province, which remains a dangerous place more than seven months after a U.S. Marine-led offensive...
PUL-I-KHUMRI, Afghanistan — Abdul Rehman Rahimi, the police chief of Baghlan province in northern Afghanistan, was just saying that the Taliban threat was under control when his counter-terrorism chief walked in, smirking with self-satisfaction and holding up a homemade detonator and a tangle of charred electrical wire tipped by a blasting cap.
"They tried to set this off as I was digging it up," Col. Ahmad Jan said. "The wire began burning — see, it still smells — but I cut it in time."
In the past year, Jan has defused about 650 such bombs. Many of them were planted along the two key supply routes of the U.S.-led International Security Assistance Force.
While the U.S. military has focused on the Taliban's southern strongholds, the militants and allied groups have been gaining ground in the north. The difficulties in Baghlan are emblematic of the uphill battle the United States and its allies face in trying to stabilize Afghanistan enough to begin drawing down troops next year.
The smaller NATO units that operate in the north are under restrictions driven by opposition to the war at home [emphasis added]...
The US and how it gets along–or rather does not–with the Paks...[plus Kabul negotiating at high level with the Taliban]
SARKARI BAGH, AFGHANISTAN - One recent night, a buried bomb sliced through a hulking military vehicle near here, killing two U.S. soldiers. Last month, the Taliban murdered an Afghan man, stuffed his nose with cash, placed a Koran in his hands and hung his body from a tree. Almost every day, insurgents fire on American troops stationed in this rural village.
Even so, their company commander, Capt. Mikel Resnick, says: "We're winning the war up here."
As a major new offensive gets underway here in the Arghandab River valley and elsewhere in Kandahar province, criticism is rising in Washington about the coherence of the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan. President Obama is said to be troubled by mounting casualties, many in this southern Taliban stronghold. Skeptics in Congress and the White House are demanding more data on the progress of the war.
![]()
But the Delta Company soldiers in this one corner of one district have a different view. They arrived two months ago in what was clearly Taliban land. Today it is contested land. To them, violence is a sign of progress: Now the Taliban has someone to fight.
Theirs is, by necessity, a narrow perspective. Mere miles away, the battle is more pitched and the ground more treacherous. Yet, although he does not have charts or graphs to prove it, Resnick, 27, insists that he also sees what the military calls changed "atmospherics": busy stores and streets, tea served to U.S. soldiers. These are glimmers of what commanders say could amount to longer-term success.
"They don't want the Taliban," the battalion commander of troops in the region, Lt. Col. Rodger Lemons, said of Afghans in the valley. "But I think they're still waiting to see what happens."
That assessment highlights the awkward arithmetic behind the influx of U.S. forces into southern Afghanistan, where troops carry the hefty assignment of ejecting the Taliban and linking isolated villagers to local governments. The clock is ticking in Washington midway between Obama's December 2009 troop surge announcement and his July 2011 troop drawdown pledge. But many soldiers have only recently carved bases into remote mountainsides and begun chipping away at a mission they say is difficult but doable...
The top Marine in Afghanistan, speaking at Camp Pendleton on Thursday, gave an upbeat assessment of the Marines' progress in Helmand province, long a Taliban stronghold.
"They're paying a price but they're winning the fight," Maj. Gen. Richard Mills said at a ceremony in which he relinquished command of the 1st Marine Division. "They're hurting the enemy,” he said. The enemy “is backpedaling, he's desperate.”
While optimism is a common attribute among Marine officers, Mills has seemed more guarded in previous comments about Helmand province.
Mills assumed command of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward) in March, with a headquarters at Camp Leatherneck on the edge of the Afghan desert. From there, he commands 20,000-plus troops, about half of them from Camp Pendleton...
MARJAH, Afghanistan — The young Marine had a simple question for the farmer with the white beard: Have you seen any Taliban today?
The answer came within seconds — from insurgents hiding nearby who ended the conversation with bursts of automatic rifle fire that sent deadly rounds cracking overhead.
It was a telling coincidence — and the start of yet another gunbattle in Marjah, the southern poppy-producing hub which U.S. forces wrested from Taliban control in February to restore government rule.
Eight months on, the Taliban are still here in force, waging a full-blown guerrilla insurgency that rages daily across a bomb-riddled landscape of agricultural fields and irrigation trenches.
As U.S. involvement in the war enters its 10th year, the failure to pacify this town raises questions about the effectiveness of America's overall strategy. Similarly crucial operations are now under way in neighboring Kandahar province, the Taliban's birthplace.
There are signs the situation in Marjah is beginning to improve, but "it's still a very tough fight," said Capt. Chuck Anklam, whose Marine company has lost three men since arriving in July. "We're in firefights all over, every day."
...Residents say the town is more insecure than ever.
"There was peace here before you came," farmer Khari Badar told one Marine patrol that recently visited his home. "Today, there is only fighting."
Marines say the Taliban can no longer move freely through the town with fighters and weapons. But the militants are still doing so clandestinely — so much so, that "we have areas where every time we go in, we know we're going to become engaged" in fighting, Anklam said...
The coalition has succeeded in setting up a nascent government in the town's district center. But the local officials' connection to the people they govern is thin. The most visible signs of authority today are sandbagged police checkpoints that frequently come under attack...
Anklam said the Taliban enjoy "the tacit support of probably the vast majority of the population," but said they had known little other rule for years and were still too scared to stand up to them. He said several dismembered bodies, apparently of suspected coalition sympathizers, had been found over the last few months in the town's canals...
What’s notable about the new White House report on Afghanistan and Pakistan sent to Congress this week is its bleak assessment of the security picture. You could almost read President Obama between the lines warning the military: This strategy isn’t working the way we hoped. Don’t ask me for more troops…
You can sense in this report the tension that lies ahead between Obama and his commander in Afghanistan, Gen. David Petraeus. The military didn’t write this assessment (one top military leader hadn’t even read it before it was leaked to the Wall Street Journal)…
What drew a front-page headline in the Journal was the report’s discussion of the deteriorating political situation in Pakistan and the refusal of the Pakistani military to mount a new offensive against the Taliban and al-Qaeda in North Waziristan, as the United States wants. “This is as much a political choice as it is a reflection of an under-resourced military prioritizing its targets,” the report notes, although it concedes that after the devastating floods in August, the Pakistani military was swamped with relief work.
The sharp critique will add a little more fuel to the combustible U.S.-Pakistani relationship…
Reading the Pakistan section, you can’t help wondering whether a soft coup is taking place [emphasis added]: The military (whose popularity is increasing even as that of the politicians declines) is assuming ever-greater responsibility for Pakistan’s welfare, even though it is nominally staying out of politics…
The cornerstone of the U.S. strategy — the plan to begin transferring responsibility to Afghan forces starting in July 2011 — also looks shaky. The Afghan army and police are expanding, but their “operational effectiveness is uneven.” An effort to recruit more Pashtuns from the south has had “inconclusive” results. A highly touted Afghan army operation in August was botched (“hastily planned, poorly rehearsed”)…
Given the temptations to fudge the facts, you have to credit the White House for making an independent evaluation, without the weasel-words that often fill such reports…
...
SPIEGEL ONLINE: Should your cooperation with the Pakistani army fail, is there a possibility that Pakistan would become the next military target of the US?
Jones: I am going to take the optimistic view that rational people do rational things and that -- with the help of friends and allies and common goals -- Pakistan will avoid, or hopefully avoid, that unfortunate eventuality. But hope is not a strategy, so we have to be cognizant of the fact that there are things which could happen that could alter the relationship if we are not careful...
The war that Canadian soldiers are helping wage in Afghanistan is not being lost. Having spent nearly six months in the country since 2006, most of that time embedded with our troops, I’ve just come home again, convinced of it.
But the war isn’t being won, either; the conflict, with sporadic fighting and death by remote control, just continues.
So it will, barring some miracle truce, and long after the last Canadian battle group has left Kandahar province next summer.
Other armies that comprise the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) have enough capacity — if not the desire — to keep killing Taliban with relative ease, for many years. The United States might one day reduce its troop count in Afghanistan but having established its presence there with massive military fortresses, it won’t just up and leave.
The Taliban, for their part, have the resolve and resources to see that their fight lasts.
If anything is being lost, it’s the counterinsurgency, the crucial allied attempt to win local confidence and co-operation. Without those, this long war cannot be won.
The counterinsurgency is failing in the hinterland. Rural Afghans are still wary of foreign troops, even after almost nine years of intervention. They don’t trust their own politicians, whom they accuse of corruption and double-dealing. They’re frightened of the Taliban, who dominate village society and who use a medieval system of justice to mete out rough punishment and perform executions.
The situation is worst in rural Kandahar, where Canadian soldiers have operated since early 2006 and where they have never been made to feel welcome. Coalition soldiers no longer speak of winning local “hearts and minds.”
Kandaharis are in “self-survival mode,” a senior Canadian officer serving in Kandahar told me recently. “They’ve lived with war for 30 years,” the officer said. “They don’t trust anyone outside of their immediate family.”..
A powerful bomb killed an outspoken Afghan governor and 19 other worshippers in a crowded mosque Friday in northern Afghanistan, where insurgents are trying to expand their influence beyond the embattled south.
A wounded survivor said he believed a suicide bomber praying to the right of the governor carried out the attack, which wounded 35 people and took place in Taluqan, the capital of Takhar province.
The death of Mohammad Omar, the governor of neighboring Kunduz province, came just days after he publicly warned of escalating threats from Taliban and foreign fighters across the north. If steps aren’t taken to counter them, Afghan and coalition forces will face “disaster,” he said.
“Violence in north and northeastern Afghanistan will increase like it has in Kandahar and Helmand,” Omar said, referring to two provinces in the south where the Taliban have their greatest influence. “It will be very difficult for the government and the international community to conduct clearing operations and fight gunbattles in all parts of the country.”
Security has been deteriorating for the past two years in Kunduz and surrounding provinces — known hideouts for the Taliban, al-Qaida and fighters from other militant factions, including the Haqqani network, Hizb-i-Islami and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.
NATO has sent more troops to the north [including a US Army brigade combat team
http://www.army.mil/-news/2010/08/18/43865-life-in-the-north-country---the-story-of-the-110th-mtn-brigade-logistics-support-team-in-afghanistans-rc-north/ ]
and has been pushing harder into militant-held areas the past several months…
The Torkham border crossing in Pakistan was opened for NATO supply convoy traffic Sunday morning, authorities told CNN.
Trucks are free to pass once they have cleared customs, said Amjad Ali, a constable for the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Pakistan closed the main land route for NATO supplies crossing from Pakistan to Afghanistan after U.S. helicopter strikes across the border killed two Pakistani soldiers.
A report from a NATO and Pakistan assessment team concluded that soldiers fired warning shots to let them know of their presence, but the helicopter crews assumed they were insurgents and fired the shots.
While the main route has been closed, at least seven attacks on convoys carrying supplies for NATO forces in Afghanistan have taken place in Pakistan. The convoys are generally operated by contracted Pakistani firms, using Pakistani trucks and drivers.
Since October 1, at least six people have been killed in attacks on supply vehicles.
The Pakistani Taliban has claimed responsibility for the most recent attack, which took place Saturday in Pakistan's western Baluchistan province.
Assailants attacked 28 oil tankers with a machine gun and rockets, said Meeran Bukhsh, a police official in the Bolan district, said. Police said the tankers caught fire, and two people were injured...
A second supply route through Chaman in western Pakistan was open during the Torkham closure, [emphasis added, near Quetta] but the Pakistani Taliban has threatened violence on any route used for NATO purposes.
...
Within hours of last Thursday's helicopter strikes, the Pakistani government retaliated by shutting down the Torkham border crossing, which lies north of Peshawar on the Grant Trunk Road. Torkham is the crossing through which a majority of non-lethal NATO supplies pass into Afghanistan from Pakistan, once they are offloaded from ships based in Pakistan's port city of Karachi. The other main crossing into Afghanistan, at Chaman linking Baluchistan and Kandahar, has remained open...
While the anxiety surrounding the road closures that attract attacks is understandable, the real puzzle is not how to prevent these outcomes generally or even why this one happened in particular. The real question is why doesn't this happen more often and with greater consequence? Even garden variety pilferage of the supply line is minimal according to U.S. officials and this current episode has been a nuisance but not a strategic threat. The 120 or more trucks that have been destroyed comprise less than one percent of the total traffic in any given month, according to U.S. Department of Defense officials.
So, why haven't attacks on the supply line to Afghanistan been more common? It's reasonable to argue that a dedicated and sensible insurgent would target these trucks along the way from Karachi to Torkham or to Chaman in Pakistan and from Torkham or Chaman to their final destinations within Afghanistan. This would be simple to do as the Pakistani security forces do not protect those privately-owned trucks and much of the route in Afghanistan winds through narrow mountain passes.
The answer is simple: trucking mafias and organized criminal and insurgent networks are all making money off of this system. The system of payoffs is elaborate yet elegant. Pashtuns dominate the trucking mafia in Pakistan and represent enormous financial interests in the fundamental integrity of the supply line system. The drivers and their companies must pay off Pakistani police and any other relevant government officials to secure "safe" passage and to resolve any "paperwork complexities."
Insurgents and criminal organizations also get their courtesy payment in exchange for safe passage to Afghanistan. Ordinary smugglers and blackmarketeers get their pieces of the pie too. Cargo containers are pilfered in small amounts. They are in turn auctioned off and the buyers sell their contents in the "bara bazaars" (black markets) throughout Pakistan. Some of the contents of the trucks have made their way into the hands of Pakistani insurgents. Overall, pilferage is low. This seems deliberately calibrated to ensure that such loss is an irritant to be tolerated rather than a problem to be fixed...
Sooner -- rather than later -- the mafias and the militants will want their revenue streams reopened. To get the trucks rolling, there will be a slew of renegotiated contracts with trucking firms and protection rackets demanding a higher price to get the job done. The drivers -- who make the least off of this racket -- will also likely see increased pay in recognition of the increasing dangers of the task. In the end, the loss of profit to all parties during this last week will be recouped in spades when the traffic resumes at higher prices.
It is the non-state actors who will likely decide when enough is enough and get the traffic and their profits moving again. And they will again decide when it's time to renegotiate their contracts by blowing up more trucks.
More here.Franco Frattini, Italy's foreign minister said its 3,400 troops will have left the country by 2014.
The Italian decision follows the withdrawal of Dutch troops earlier this year and the Canadian decision to leave next year, as commanders struggle to sure up an alliance which is still short of troops.
Nato commanders have found it increasingly difficult to persuade members to stay in Afghanistan in the face of mounting death tolls and domestic opposition.
Mr Frattini spoke as Italy mourned four Italian soldiers killed at the weekend when their convoy was blown up in western Afghanistan.
He said: "To the families of our soldiers who died a heroic death I want to confirm that there's a political plan for Afghanistan, that their loved ones have not been sent to certain defeat in an impossible mission."
"That's with a timing that has yet to be decided: summer 2011 for the start of a gradual drawdown of troops, with the intention of completing it by 2014," he told an Italian newspaper ....
