http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/25/AR2010072502092.html?wpisrc=nl_headline

Leaked files lay bare war in Afghanistan

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By Greg Jaffe and Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writer 
Monday, July 26, 2010 

Tens of thousands of classified documents related to the Afghan war released 
without authorization by the group Wikileaks.org reveal in often excruciating 
detail the struggles U.S. troops have faced in battling an increasingly potent 
Taliban force and in working with Pakistani allies who also appear to be 
helping the Afghan insurgency. 

documents -- most of which consist of low-level field reports -- represent one 
of the largest single disclosures of such information in U.S. history. 
Wikileaks gave the material to the New York Times, the British newspaper the 
Guardian and the German magazine Der Spiegel several weeks ago on the condition 
that they not be published before Sunday night, when the group released them 
publicly. 
Covering the period from January 2004 through December 2009, when the Obama 
administration began to deploy more than 30,000 additional troops into 
Afghanistan and announced a new strategy, the documents provide new insights 
into a period in which the Taliban was gaining strength, Afghan civilians were 
growing increasingly disillusioned with their government, and U.S. troops in 
the field often expressed frustration at having to fight a war without 
sufficient resources. 

The documents disclose for the first time that Taliban insurgents appear to 
have used portable, heat-seeking surface-to-air missiles to shoot down U.S. 
helicopters. Heat-seeking missiles, which the United States provided to the 
anti-Soviet Afghan fighters known as mujaheddin in the 1980s, helped inflict 
heavy losses on the Soviet Union until it withdrew its forces from Afghanistan 
in 1989. 

One report from the spring of 2007 refers to witnesses who saw what appeared to 
be a heat-seeking missile destroy a CH-47 transport helicopter. The Times first 
unearthed the document in its review of the files. The Chinook crash killed 
five Americans, a British citizen and a Canadian. Even though the initial U.S. 
report stated that the helicopter was "engaged and struck with a missile," a 
NATO spokesman suggested that small-arms fire was responsible for bringing down 
the helicopter. 

Although the use of such weapons by the Taliban appears to be very limited, the 
disclosure that relatively low-tech insurgents had acquired such arms would 
have fostered the impression that the Afghan war effort was faltering at a time 
when U.S. fatalities in Iraq were at record levels and the Bush administration 
was struggling to maintain support for the Iraq war even among its Republican 
base. 

The Obama administration criticized Wikileaks for disclosing the classified 
documents. "Wikileaks made no effort to contact us about these documents," 
national security adviser James Jones said in a statement. "The United States 
government learned from news organizations that these documents would be 
posted." 

Senior administration officials acknowledged they had been anxiously awaiting 
the documents' release but sought to diminish their significance. "There is not 
a lot new here for those who have been following developments closely," one 
U.S. official said. 

Many of the documents posted by Wikileaks suggest that Pakistan's spy service 
might be helping Afghan insurgents plan and carry out attacks on U.S. forces in 
Afghanistan and their Afghan government allies. A few reports also describe 
cooperation between Pakistani intelligence and fighters aligned with al-Qaeda. 

U.S. intelligence concluded a number of years ago that Pakistan retained its 
ties with Taliban groups, intelligence officials said. Late last year, 
President Obama warned in a letter to Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari that 
the United States would no longer put up with the contacts. 

But the documents appear to suggest that Pakistan's spy agency, known as the 
Inter-Services Intelligence directorate or ISI, might have assisted insurgents 
in planning some attacks, at least in the past. 

The Pakistani government denied the allegations in the classified intelligence 
documents. "These reports reflect nothing more than single-source comments and 
rumors, which abound on both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border and are 
often proved wrong after deeper examination," said Husain Haqqani, Pakistan's 
ambassador to the United States. 

The documents detail multiple reports of cooperation between retired Lt. Gen. 
Hamid Gul, who ran ISI in the late 1980s, and Afghan insurgents battling U.S. 
forces in the mountainous eastern region of the country. In the latter years of 
the anti-Soviet insurgency, Gul worked closely with several major mujaheddin 
fighters who currently are battling U.S. troops and trying to topple the Afghan 
government. The documents also include reports that Gul was trying to 
reestablish contacts with insurgent leaders such as Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and 
Jalaluddin Haqqani, whose fighters have been responsible for some of the 
bloodiest attacks on U.S. forces. 

Over the past decade, U.S. intelligence has collected evidence of direct 
contacts between ISI and Jalaluddin Haqqani, Hekmatyar and Taliban leader 
Mohammed Omar. That evidence includes both human intelligence and intercepted 
communications, officials said. 

As the new Afghan war strategy was being formulated late last year, Obama 
stepped up private pressure on the Pakistanis to sever ties with the Taliban, 
suggesting that if there wasn't improvement, the United States would begin to 
take matters into its own hands. 

"The key thing to bear in mind is that the administration is not naive about 
Pakistan," an Obama administration official said. "The problem with the 
Pakistanis is that the more you threaten them, the more they become entrenched 
and don't see a path forward with you." 

Most of the voluminous store of classified reports reflects the daily grind of 
life in Afghanistan as covered in news reports for the past several years. In 
them, junior officers complain about poorly equipped Afghan forces, corrupt 
Afghan government officials and a U.S. war effort that at times seemed to be 
seriously wanting for resources. 

In one document, a team of civil affairs soldiers reports donating money for an 
orphanage that is supposed to help about 100 fatherless children and finding 
later that only about 30 boys and girls were being helped. Also missing were 
the stores of rice, grain and cooking oil that the troops had provided. "We 
found very few orphans living there and could not find most of the HA 
[humanitarian assistance] we had given them," the report states. 

Other reports give accounts of police chiefs skimming the pay of their patrol 
officers or placing nonexistent "ghost" troops on their rolls so that they 
could pocket the additional salaries. 

Another report that chronicles a massive Taliban attack on Combat Outpost 
Keating in eastern Afghanistan quotes frantic radio calls from an overwhelmed 
U.S. lieutenant seeking air support to hold off the much larger Taliban force. 
The attack on the base was chronicled in a Washington Post report this year, 
based on interviews with the officer and his troops. 

At times the U.S. troops show a lack of knowledge about Afghanistan, botching 
the names of cities and the relationships between senior Afghan officials. 

The reports highlight how civilian casualties resulting from mistakes on the 
battlefield have alienated Afghans. Over the past year, civilian casualties in 
Afghanistan have dropped significantly. But many of the problems referred to in 
the memo -- a resilient Taliban, porous borders with Pakistani safe havens and 
largely ineffectual Afghan government -- remain. 

This Story
  a.. Leaked files lay bare war in Afghanistan
  b.. In latest release, a new approach
  c.. Battling Afghan insurgency means reassessing the enemy
  d.. Read the Documents: Afghan War Diary, 2004-2010
  e.. Times: The War Logs
  f.. Guardian: Afghanistan, the war logs
  g.. Full coverage: Obama's war
  h.. Taliban, Afghan officials say one of two missing U.S. troops is dead
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