Showing posts with label taliban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label taliban. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 July 2011

Canada's exit highlights Afghanistan challenges

The formal end of the Canadian combat mission, commemorated in a ceremony last week at NATO's main base in the south, marked the first battlefield exit by a core member of the U.S.-led coalition. With the departure of 2,850 combat troops, an ally that had deployed forces to Afghanistan in the earliest days of the nearly 10-year-old war bowed out.

Allied nations wih forces in Afghanistan have made no secret of their wish to follow suit, particularly in the wake of President Obama's decision to withdraw 33,000 American troops, about one-third of the total here, by the end of next summer. French President Nicolas Sarkozy, visiting Afghanistan this week, said he planned to bring home 1,000 of France's 4,000 troops by the end of next year. Qualms about the mission have been growing in France, spurred by Wednesday's deaths of five French soldiers in a suicide bombing in eastern Afghanistan.

"If the Americans, who gathered this force, are on the way out, how can it be expected that anyone else will want to prolong their presence?" asked one European diplomat in Kabul who requested anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly about his country's views.

Among Afghan civilians, particularly those living in the most violent corners of the country, there is an uneasy sense that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization force is painting an overly rosy picture of security, the better to justify troop pullbacks to come. Over the weekend, Gen. David H. Petraeuscited falling numbers of insurgent attacks. But here in the southern city of Kandahar, some Afghans said such figures do not reflect the perilous reality of day-to-day life.

"Every day, there are killings and kidnappings," said a seamstress named Shalah. Two sons of her neighbors were recently abducted by the Taliban; the family, struggling to raise a ransom, received word a few days ago that one had already been executed.

In Kandahar's blast-oven summertime heat, people sleep with their windows open, or bed down on mattresses on the roof. "So the sound I hear in the night is the weeping of the women of this family," said Shalah, who did not want to disclose her family name.

For the Canadians, Kandahar province proved a killing field, and the sustained ferocity of combat here shocked a nation that had primarily envisioned a peacekeeping mission. At home in Canada, the war felt intensely personal; citizens routinely lined a highway bridge to pay respects when the bodies of fallen soldiers were repatriated.

Although Canada's contingent was only NATO's sixth-largest, it suffered disproportionate casualties: 157 deaths, according to the independent website icasualties.org, roughly equal to the combined fatalities sustained by larger troop contributors Germany, France and Italy.

Despite an arduous fight, the Canadians were too thinly deployed to break the Taliban grip on strategic districts surrounding Kandahar city. That did not happen until last summer, when American-led forces that had arrived in the Obama-ordered "surge" of troops dislodged the insurgents from key areas in the province.

Many Kandaharis believe the net effect of clearing outlying districts of insurgents has been to make the city itself more dangerous. And while they acknowledge that travel outside Kandahar is safer than it has been in several years, some rural landowners are not yet ready to risk moving their families back to isolated farm villages.

"It's a cat-and-mouse game with the Taliban," said Ahad Maiwandi, whose family holdings are in Maiwand district, about 30 miles from Kandahar. "And people perceive that the cat is growing tired. So I think the Taliban will be back."

The fact that years of costly Canadian efforts had little overall military effect in Kandahar province lent some awkwardness to the transfer to American forces. U.S. Army Col. Todd Wood, commander of the incoming Task Force Arctic Wolves, paid tribute to their sacrifices but said their departure would make little real difference to the fight.

"This is a normal progression of units in and out," he said before the transfer-of-command ceremony.

The Canadians pointed with pride to a stay in Kandahar that produced many development projects, such as schools and clinics. But even some local people who were appreciative of those efforts said they did not expect the Canadian projects to leave a permanent mark. Relations with local and provincial officials were sometimes testy; Kandahar's governor, Tooryalai Wesa, skipped the farewell ceremony.

Like other NATO nations with an eye on the exit, Canada agreed to remain involved in efforts to ready the Afghan police and army to take security control. It is deploying about 950 trainers to help prepare for that transition, meant to be completed in 2014.

In a statement, the group praised Canada's "responsible step," and called on the people of "other invading countries to … oblige their governments to put an end to the aimless war."

Source:latimes.com

Thursday, 14 July 2011

Wali Karzai Memorial Service Bombed

(KANDAHAR, Afghanistan) — A suicide bomber blew himself up inside a mosque in southern Afghanistan on Thursday, killing four people among those who had gathered for a memorial service for the president's assassinated half brother, the government said.
Among those killed in the explosion in Kandahar city was Hekmatullah Hekmat, the head of the clerical council for the province, the Interior Ministry said. At least 13 people were wounded, said Zalmai Ayubi, spokesman for the provincial governor.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.
The Sarra Jamai mosque in the southwest of the city had been filled with relatives and friends of the president's half brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, who was killed earlier this week. They were offering their condolences to the family of the provincial leader.
Wali Karzai was shot at close range by a confidant on Tuesday, leaving President Hamid Karzai without a powerful ally in Kandahar province, a former Taliban stronghold and the site of recent military offensives by the U.S.-led military coalition.
The Taliban claimed responsibility for the killing, which has threatened to create a power vacuum in the south.



Source: www.time.com

Wednesday, 13 July 2011

An assassination in Kandahar


Ahmad Wali Karzai's personal and tribal connections made him an invaluable asset to the occupying forces. PHOTO: REUTERS


Ambivalence is the best posture to adopt regarding the assassination of Ahmad Wali Karzai. He was the undoubted Achilles heel of his half-brother, Afghan President Hamid Karzai. Ahmad Karzai, with credible allegations that he was intimately involved in Afghanistan’s criminal drug trade while bring on the CIA payroll, symbolised all that was wrong with the Afghan government. Despite all the controversy surrounding him, Hamid Karzai put his brother in charge of the all-important Kandahar area where he was of immense help to Nato forces in confronting the Taliban. This, then, was the central dilemma surrounding Ahmed Karzai. His personal and tribal connections made him an invaluable asset to the occupying forces seeking allies in a country where they had none, but his personal dealings gave lie to the notion that Nato was seeking to win hearts and minds.
Although we know that Karzai was shot dead by his bodyguard, we do not yet know what the motive was. The Taliban have rushed to claim credit but the Taliban are known to boast about actions they never carried out and there are plenty of people who would have lots of reasons to want Karzai dead. If, indeed, he was assassinated at the instigation of the Taiban, that is yet one more reason to forcefully denounce the killing. We in Pakistan are familiar with politicians being assassinated for ideological reasons and we can empathise — former Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer, too, was killed by his own bodyguard.
The assassination shows the folly of Nato’s Afghanistan policy and hints at the turmoil that will follow as the US gradually withdraws its troops. Nato has relied far too heavily on individuals rather than building institutions. It has compounded that mistake by having a preference for individuals who were unencumbered by the rule of law. In an ideal world, Ahmed Karzai’s assassination would cause the US and its allies to rethink this obviously failed policy. But after a decade in Afghanistan, the US seems ready to call it a day. Ultimately, Karzai most likely died in vain.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 13th, 2011.
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