AFGHANISTAN: After You've Gone

Stratefy 3/6/11

Despite a sharp increase in suicide bomb casualties in the last week, 
NATO combat deaths are still less (217) than the first five months last 
year (220). NATO forces continue to do great damage to Taliban and drug 
gang base areas. This doesn't get much media attention, but the troops 
on the ground know they are costing the drug gangs a lot of money, and 
weakening Taliban capabilities to terrorize and recruit. The enemy still 
can't face NATO forces in combat without getting slaughtered. So, as in 
so many past conflicts, the enemy continues to seek other ways to 
survive. Playing the media and using terror have had more success, but 
not enough to stop the NATO/Afghan offensive operations. Some of the 
media manipulations are clever. In the south, where ammonium nitrate 
fertilizer (which can be used to make bombs) is banned, some media was 
convinced (or coerced) to believe that this ban was the cause of 
declining crop yields (to the exclusion of so many other factors that 
hurt yields). Other types of (non-explosive) fertilizer are available, 
and this is ignored in these stories, which have achieved some traction.

The drug gangs and Taliban only represent about 20 percent of the 
population (those who directly benefit from the drug trade and those 
committed to the Taliban goal of regaining national power), but are 
encouraged by increased talk in NATO countries about withdrawing 
military forces. This would make the drug gangs and their Taliban allies 
more powerful, because of the drug gang cash and Taliban skill at using 
terror. It would also take a lot of pressure off Islamic terrorist 
groups. Most Afghans (especially the non-Pushtun majority in the north) 
oppose these three groups. Even most of the Pushtuns (40 percent of 
Afghans) oppose the drugs and religious terrorism, but without the 
foreign troops, the most likely result is a destructive civil war, and 
growing demands (and possibly action) from Iran, Russia and Pakistan for 
"something to be done." These three nations are most hurt by the Afghan 
drugs (especially the cheaper opium, the more expensive heroin is for 
the more affluent West and oil-rich Arabs.) An invasion and partition of 
Afghanistan (by Iran, Pakistan and, from the north, Russian backed 
Tajikistan) would not be out of the question, since this sort of thing 
has happened before. In the past, Indian empires have controlled 
Afghanistan as far west as Kandahar, and Iranian empires have held 
territory as far east as Kabul. Same pattern in the north.

Another major casualty of NATO withdrawal would be many educational and 
economic development programs. The Taliban are hostile to education, 
especially for girls, while the drug gangs (full of, well, gangsters) 
would have an easier time criminalizing more of the economy. That sort 
of thing cripples the economy.

The Taliban and drug gangs are basically Pushtun organizations, and the 
suicide bombing attacks against government officials tend to target 
non-Pushtun officials. In Afghanistan, the Pushtuns are seen as the 
major troublemakers, with the drugs and terrorism the most obvious 
examples of this. Outside of Pushtun areas (where Pushtuns are easily 
spotted), other Islamic terror groups (that recruit among non-Pushtuns) 
are crucial in keeping the terror going, especially in the north. 
Despite that, there is much less violence in non-Pushtun areas.

The most carefully planned and heavily funded terror attacks are suicide 
bombings directed at senior government officials (especially those in 
the military, police and intelligence). A lot of these operations are 
carried out by the Haqqani Network in Pakistan (where this Afghan led 
group has been hiding since the 1980s fight with the Russians.) Most of 
the terror violence is directed at much less well protected targets 
(tribal and village leaders, staff and students at schools for girls).

One area where NATO sees a lot of progress is the training of Afghan 
security forces. These soldiers and police have become markedly more 
professional and effective in the last few years. But corruption is 
still a big problem, as it is everywhere else in Afghanistan. Once NATO 
forces left, these more effective Afghan troops would be more subject to 
getting hired by drug gangs and warlords, thus increasing the combat 
capabilities of these groups. But if the central government received 
enough Western aid money, the drug gangs (whose activities are about a 
third of GDP) would not be able to just buy the country. There would be 
a constant bidding war and decades of violence (see what has happened in 
Colombia and the Golden Triangle of Burma). .

May 31, 2011: President Karzai wants to impose even stricter ROE (Rules 
Of Engagement), to eliminate civilian deaths. This is a response to a 
recent bombing that killed 14 women and children. The Taliban and drug 
gangs have invested a lot in the local media, to make each civilian 
death, at the hands of foreign troops, a major story. The majority of 
civilian combat deaths are at the hands of the Taliban or drug gangs, 
and the local media plays those down (or else). It's a sweet deal for 
the bad guys, and a powerful battlefield tool. The civilians appreciate 
the attention, but the ROE doesn't reduce overall civilian deaths, 
because the longer the Taliban have control of civilians in a combat 
situations, the more they kill. The Taliban often use civilians as human 
shields, and kill those who refuse, or are suspected of disloyalty. In 
most parts of Afghanistan, civilians are eager to get the Taliban killed 
or driven away, as quickly as possible. The number of civilian deaths, 
at the hands of NATO/Afghan forces, are spectacularly low by historical 
standards. The troops know this, some of the civilians know this, but 
the media doesn't care and the Taliban need a media win, as a way to 
extract something that is, otherwise, a military disaster for them. Last 
year, 2,777 Afghan civilians died in the fighting, most because of 
Taliban terrorism or using them as human shields. Deaths from NATO 
action were down 21 percent in 2010 and that trend continues.






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