Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

What the Soviets learned fighting an unwinnable war in Afghanistan … – Los Angeles Times

To the editor: As we evaluate President Trumps new policy on the Afghanistan war, we should be mindful of the first law of holes: If you find yourself in one, stop digging. (There is no winning military strategy in Afghanistan, Opinion, Aug. 23)

The president might learn something from another leader who got mired in the graveyard of empires. At a 1986 Politburo meeting, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev looked in the mirror and said it is time to go:

We have been fighting in Afghanistan for already six years. If the approach is not changed, we will continue to fight for another 20-30 years. What, are we going to fight endlessly, as a testimony that our troops are not able to deal with the situation? We need to finish this process as soon as possible.

The result: Moscow got out of its hole and never looked back.

We should leave it to the neighboring countries that have a stake in cauterizing the malignant Islamic State and other terrorist cancers that would emerge in a collapsed Afghanistan and threaten their security to fashion a regional containment policy. The U.S. from offshore could provide air power and special forces to knock out terrorist cells as they emerge.

Doing anything more risks staying in the hole weve been in for 16 years. It is time to stop digging.

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Bennett Ramberg, Los Angeles

The writer served as a policy analyst in the State Departments Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs in the George H.W. Bush administration.

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In the 1980s, Islamic fighters were battling the Soviets in Afghanistan. The U.S. supported those fighters, as it was happy to see the Soviet Unions resources drained by an endless war.

Now, after 16 years of fighting the Taliban and others and supporting a corrupt government, we find ourselves draining our resources in an endless war. The victory we seek continues to grow less ambitious and decisive.

Russian President Vladimir Putin must be smiling.

Doris Isolini Nelson, Los Angeles

Follow the Opinion section on Twitter @latimesopinion and Facebook

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What the Soviets learned fighting an unwinnable war in Afghanistan ... - Los Angeles Times

What has worked in Afghanistan. – Slate Magazine

Soldiers operating under NATO command interact with Afghan boys of the Pashtun tribe near the Morghan-Khecha village in Kandahar province, Afghanistan, on Sept. 8, 2012.

Tony Karumba/AFP/GettyImages

There is a clich about Afghanistan that custom dictates must be included in every TV appearance, column, and book about that land: It is the graveyard of empires. From Alexander the Greats Greeks, to the Persians, to the British, to the Soviets, to the Americans, nation after nation has tried (and largely failed) to invade and pacify the mountainous country and its people. This history shapes Americas inheritance today: both the reality on the ground for American forces in Afghanistan and the perceptions of our allies (particularly those with experience there, like the British) of possible outcomes.

Nonetheless, this broad brushstroke version of history ignores a number of important cases where foreign powers have found successalbeit often fleetingin Afghanistan. There is a pattern to these successes: They are typically modest efforts that do not attempt to remake Afghanistan but rather achieve certain discrete, well-defined ends. And significantly, there is some overlap between this pattern and the policy articulated (albeit in an opaque manner) by President Trump on Monday night, that the U.S. might have a glimmer of hope as it approaches its 17th year of fighting in Afghanistan.

Four examples of limited success in the modern era are worth revisiting, in part because of their lessons for America today, and in part because each carried complications that only became apparent over the long term.

The first is Americas legendary sponsorship of the Afghan mujahedeen who beat back the Soviet invasion between 1979 and 1988. This covert effort began with small amounts of support funneled through various middlemen (including Pakistans shadowy security apparatus) and grew into billions of dollars of money, sophisticated weapons (like Stinger missiles capable of shooting down Russian helicopters), and technical assistance. What made this effort so successful was its narrow goalinflicting Soviet casualties in the context of the Cold Warand the simple truth that its easier to support an insurgency than a counterinsurgency, especially when that insurgency is playing on its home turf. However, after this insurgency pushed out the Soviets, the U.S. washed its hands of this support. Over time, parts of this rebel movement would evolve into al-Qaida and the Taliban, with major long-term repercussions for the U.S.

The lesson of the past 16 years may be that lofty goals are beyond our reach.

A second, slightly older example of success in Afghanistan is the massive development efforts undertaken there during the mid-20th century by the U.S. and Soviet Union as the two superpowers competed for Afghan affection and allegiance. Just as it had for centuries before, Afghanistans strategic location on the Soviet Unions periphery, between Iran and Pakistan atop historic trading routes, made it matter to each country. During the Cold War, the U.S. poured hundreds of millions of dollars into agricultural and infrastructure projects in Afghanistan, only to see those projects crumble over nearly four decades of continuous war. It was this crumbling infrastructure that U.S. forces would inherit and attempt to patch up over the past 16 years of war. Some of these projects were eerily similar to those pursued more recently. An effort to dam the Helmand River in Southern Afghanistan, partially completed in the 1950s, would be repeated again and again by the U.S. Agency for International Development after 2001. Some of these projects actually worked, improving Afghan lives and economic activity for decades. In those days, Afghanistan was a poor but stable, developing, and optimistic country. However, those successes occurred only when violence was absent and where these projects aligned with local political, economic, and geographic conditions.

The third and fourth examples of success come from Americas more recent long war in Afghanistan. The third mirrors the CIAs support for Afghan rebels during the 1970s and 1980s: It is our tactical support to Afghan security forces. Where U.S. military unitsincluding both special operations forces and conventional troopshave partnered directly with Afghan units, and provided them with U.S. support like logistics and airpower, the Afghan units have performed very well. Indeed, there is some evidence from the past few years that American-advised Afghan military units perform better than purely American units at counterinsurgency because they combine fighting skill with local knowledge.

This reflects a broader theory of counterinsurgency that its best done by indigenous security forces. To the extent that much of the current U.S.Afghanistan strategy relies on supporting Afghan forces as they fight the Taliban and al-Qaida, this holds some promise. However, foreign forces cannot fight our wars; eventually interests diverge, or conflict emerges between client and patron. This may soon happen in Afghanistan, particularly if the Afghan government decides to reach a political settlement with the Taliban, and possibly with al-Qaida elements, even as the U.S. wants to continue fighting.

The fourth and final case of success in Afghanistan concerns counterterrorism operations: those shadowy raids and drone strikes that have successfully stacked terrorist bodies like cordwood across Afghanistan and rural Pakistan. In the 16 years since 9/11, the U.S. has built a remarkable intelligence and special operations machine and put that machine to work in Iraq, Afghanistan, and across the Middle East. This machine is now capable of striking with just hours notice, collecting more intelligence, and moving onto a successive raid within the same night based on that intelligence. Some observers think this machinemore than the surge of conventional troopsplayed the most vital role in ripping the heart out of the Iraqi insurgency during 200708, and this machine has clearly played a major role in preventing al-Qaida from attacking the U.S. since 9/11.

Today, the Joint Special Operations Command machine continues its work across Afghanistan and Pakistandoing the hard, bloody, dangerous work of counterterrorism with elite special operations troops or drones. This counterterrorism effort most closely aligns with our primary interest (as articulated by President George W. Bush, and President Barack Obama, as well as President Trump) of preventing another attack on the U.S. emanating from Afghanistan. Although this machine is small, it is costly; elite troops cost more, and are in shorter supply, than their conventional counterparts in the U.S. military. However, it is conceivable that the U.S. could continue to operate this counterterrorism machine indefinitely in Afghanistan, whether led by the militarys special operations command or an analogous agency within the U.S. intelligence community. This plan is not without risk though: Counterterrorism raids often risk alienating civilians, or inflicting civilian casualties, in ways that can create enemies or undermine local government partners, as has happened in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Yemen during the past 16 years. Counterterrorism operations must be carefully calibrated and overseen in order to be effectivesomething that runs counter to Trumps promise to take the gloves off and end White House micromanagement of warfighting.

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This was embarasing. The examples of great powers achieving meaningful goals in Afghanistan include: 1. One great power beating another in a proxy war, which resulted in terrible consequences for the winning power. More...

These four cases of success in Afghanistan carry common elements: limited aims, tight alignment with their foreign sponsors interests, and expert execution. There is much left unaccomplished by these types of operations: They do not support a liberal democratic Afghan government, nor do they do much to promote economic opportunity or human rights for the Afghan people, let alone the kind of long-term development that might make Afghanistan less fertile for extremist groups in the decades to come. However, the lesson of the past 16 years may be that such lofty goals are beyond the reach of the U.S. Even in the case of American foreign assistance to Afghanistan during the Cold War, our modest efforts were unable to plan a permanent, stable democracy, nor a thriving middle class and civil society that could support one.

In his speech Monday night, President Trump appeared to take these lessons on board, focusing the U.S. on killing terrorists to the exclusion of nation building, even saying that he (like Americans) had grown weary of the war. He appears to have overruled his generals who sought a more expansive mission for U.S. forces in Afghanistan, one that would have continued to embrace a broader counterinsurgency and economic development effort. Trump was wise to overrule his generals in this instance and focus on a narrower vision of American interests in Afghanistan. Such a narrow vision offers the only path to success therealbeit one still fraught.

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What has worked in Afghanistan. - Slate Magazine

Top US general in Afghanistan vows to annihilate Islamic State – USA TODAY

The White House says its renewed effort to fight the war in Afghanistan will include more involvement from India and Pakistan. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

United States General John Nicholson, commander of the NATO Resolute Support Mission attends a press conference with Hugo Llorens (not in picture), the US ambassador to Kabul, in Kabul, Afghanistan Aug. 24, 2017.(Photo: JAWAD JALALI, EPA)

The top U.S. general in Afghanistan on Thursday vowed to annihilate the Islamic State andcrush what remains of al-Qaeda after President Trump announced a renewed effort inthe war that has dragged on for nearly 16 years.

Gen. John Nicholson said thenew strategy is a sign of a long-term commitment.

He told reporters in the countrys capital,Kabul, that additional troopswill further train Afghan forces and promised more air support. Nicholson also urged the Taliban to pursue diplomacyand said that Afghan commandos and special forces were strong.

President Trump said Monday that he was lifting restrictions on commanders in the field imposed by the Obama administration and increasing pressure on Afghanistan'sneighbor Pakistan to stop providing a safe haven to militant groups along its border.

The U.S. will sendup to 3,900 moreU.S. troops to Afghanistan as part ofthe strategy, according to media reports.

"The Taliban cannot win on the battlefield;it's time for them to join the peace process," Nicholson said, according to Reuters.

"We will not fail in Afghanistan, our national security depends on that as well."

More: Pakistan's ambassador: We want to work with Trump to end war in Afghanistan

More: Afghanistan endorses Trump's revised strategy; Taliban warns of 'graveyard'

More: Cautioning against 'hasty' pullout from Afghanistan, Trump clears path for more U.S. troops

Russia on Thursday warned thatmilitary force will notresolve the conflict.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said the U.S.strategyputs emphasis on force and that we believe that this path offers no prospects.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that Moscow is ready to cooperate with the U.S. and others to help endthe war.

Trump and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson have vowed to step up pressure on Pakistan to work harder with its neighbor to end the conflict.

Aizaz Chaudhry, Pakistans ambassador to the United States, pledged Wednesday that his countrys government is willing to work closely with the Trump administration to find a political solution to end the war.

Chaudhry told USA TODAY that the government will help promote peace talks between the U.S.-backed Afghan government and theTaliban "in whatever manner it can."

He said Pakistan would use its considerable influence over the Taliban to prod the insurgent group to the negotiation table.

Pakistan has its own struggle against the Taliban, but some agencies, such as the Intelligence services, have been accused by the U.S. and other governments of supporting the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Taliban spokesmanZabiullah Mujahid dismissedTrump's strategy earlier this week.

"If America doesn't withdraw its troops from Afghanistan, soon Afghanistan will become another graveyard for this superpower in the 21st century," he said, according to Al Jazeera.

Contributing:Waseem Abbasi, Associated Press

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Top US general in Afghanistan vows to annihilate Islamic State - USA TODAY

In Afghanistan, security interests outweigh ideology – The Hill (blog)

On Monday, President Trump finally reaffirmed the commitment of the current United States administration to fight the Taliban, Al-Qaeda, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria-Khorasan(ISIS) and other extremist elements currently operating in Afghanistan. His principled realism approach rejects hard and fast timelines and troop levels and recognizes and adapts to the conditions on the ground. Trumps strategy directly confronts the Taliban and terrorist organizations and calls on regional partners for enhanced cooperation.

An explicitly announced timeline for withdrawal without a concluded peace process would have catastrophic consequences, allowing the Taliban and other violent organizations to bide their time before unleashing yet another series of assaults on human rights and life; thus undermining the impressive gains Afghanistan has made towards democratic governance and an inclusive society.

After decades of playing the spoiled spoiler, Pakistan will now face intensified pressure by the U.S. to end its support of the Haqqani Network and Taliban leadership a decidedly welcome and necessary development. The signal that the U.S. would seek to engage India as a key economic development partner in Afghanistan, in tandem with the threat of withdrawal of billions of dollars of aid, will hopefully serve as the impetus for Islamabad to finally jettison the extremist elements that have, for far too long, sowed instability in its northwestern neighbor.

Trump rightly put the Afghan government on notice if the U.S. is going to continue to expend lives and treasure on Afghan soil, then the leadership in Kabul must do its part to increase the capacity of its security forces, expand the reach of its territorial control, increase implementation of basic services, eradicate the culture of corruption and ensure that it creates an inclusive political process. However, he also affirmed that the U.S. would utilize every implement in its foreign policy toolbox to facilitate sustainable stability in Afghanistan diplomatic, economic and military aid.

While the president asserted that the U.S. will not undertake further nation-building, American and international economic and capacity-building assistance has undeniably led to phenomenal strides in all facets of life, particularly for Afghan women and girls in their ability to overcome the gender inequality, discrimination and collective trauma systemic in Afghanistan after decades of conflict and Taliban rule. Girls have gone back to school. Women work as government ministers, judges, lawyers, soldiers, doctors and engineers. A new generation is being raised in a country that recognizes womens rights as human rights.

The U.S. has worked closely with the Afghan government to make these achievements come to fruition. If it now decides to turn its back on the initiatives that have given rise to these dramatic changes which address many of the social ills that have allowed radicalization to exist and expand in the first place it will significantly handicap the military engagement America has vowed to undertake in this revamped strategy. If the U.S. is to achieve victory against the terrorists, it must address the root causes away from the battlefield that give rise to terrorism.

To make this approach truly effective, the administration must resist the presidents isolationist inclinations and pressure regional actors including Pakistan, Russia, China, Iran and the Gulf states to reject material, financial, technical and all forms of support to the Taliban and extremist entities operating within the national borders of Afghanistan.

In addition, the State Department must be populated with competent experts at its leadership posts in southeast Asia and funded enough to be able to effectively exercise its institutional expertise.

The Afghan government should be heartened that U.S. assistance will persist, despite the presidents former campaign pledges. However, more details must be enumerated to truly determine whether or not this is simply a repackaging of previous administrations policies, or an approach that has the power to turn the tide towards peace and stability.

After 16 years, outright victory and defeat have remained elusive. The U.S. must more clearly articulate what constitutes a win, and work closely with its NATO and regional allies, the Afghan government, and most importantly the Afghan people to ensure its definition aligns with their own.

Manizha Naderi is an Afghan American and executive director of Women for Afghan Women (WAW), the largest womens non-governmental organization in Afghanistan. The organization operates 32 facilities in 14 provinces providing vital protection and services to victims of gender-based violence, including pro bono legal, vocational, educational, mediation, healthcare, childcare, counseling and housing assistance. WAW also works in New York and Washington to promote womens rights to self-determination and representation in all areas of society, and to ensure that the hard-won social, political and economic gains of women and girls are preserved. Naderi was born in Kabul and currently lives in New York.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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In Afghanistan, security interests outweigh ideology - The Hill (blog)

Key China diplomat defends Pakistan’s role in Afghanistan in call to US Secretary of State – CNBC

China's Foreign Ministry defended its ally Pakistan earlier this week after President Donald Trump said the United States could no longer be silent about militants using safe havens on Pakistani soil.

On Monday, Trump committed the United States to an open-ended conflict in Afghanistan, signalling he would send more troops to America's longest war and vowing "a fight to win."

He insisted that others - the Afghan government, Pakistan, India and NATO allies - step up their own commitment to resolving the 16-year conflict, but he saved his sharpest words for Pakistan.

Yang, who outranks China's foreign minister, told Tillerson on Wednesday that China was willing to coordinate with the United States on Afghanistan and make joint efforts to realize peace and stability there and in the region, according to a Chinese statement issued late that night.

"We must value Pakistan's important role on the Afghanistan issue, and respect Pakistan's sovereignty and reasonable security concerns," Yang told Tillerson.

Pakistan has been battling home-grown Islamists for years.

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Key China diplomat defends Pakistan's role in Afghanistan in call to US Secretary of State - CNBC