Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

Purchase of Tropical Uniforms for Afghanistan Draws Mattis’s Rebuke – New York Times

He said he was bothered not only because the report exposed waste, but also that it serves as an example of a complacent mode of thinking.

The report is an indication of a frame of mind an attitude that can affect any of us at the Pentagon or across the Department of Defense showing how those of us entrusted with supporting and equipping troops on the battlefield, if we let down our guard, can lose focus on ensuring their safety and lethality against the enemy, Mr. Mattis wrote.

His memo was released before a House Armed Services Committee hearing scheduled for Tuesday, where the uniform issue was expected to be discussed.

In 2007, Abdul Rahim Wardak, who was then serving as Afghanistans minister of defense, discovered the camouflage pattern while browsing uniform styles online, the report said. The forest pattern he chose was created and owned by HyperStealth Biotechnology Corporation, a Canadian company that has designed camouflage for the militaries of Jordan, Chile and the United Arab Emirates. The new uniforms also included expensive details, like replacing buttons with zippers.

Cavalier or casually acquiescent decisions to spend taxpayer dollars in an ineffective and wasteful manner are not to recur, Mr. Mattis wrote.

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Purchase of Tropical Uniforms for Afghanistan Draws Mattis's Rebuke - New York Times

NC congressman to Trump: Don’t have ‘change of heart’ on ending war in Afghanistan – News & Observer (blog)


News & Observer (blog)
NC congressman to Trump: Don't have 'change of heart' on ending war in Afghanistan
News & Observer (blog)
A North Carolina congressman reminded President Donald Trump of his previous opposition to the 16-year-old U.S. war in Afghanistan and urged Trump to allow Congress to debate any plan to send more troops to the nation. Republican U.S. Rep.

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NC congressman to Trump: Don't have 'change of heart' on ending war in Afghanistan - News & Observer (blog)

29 dead in Kabul car bomb attack claimed by Taliban – CNN

The blast happened at around 6:40 a.m. Monday (10:10 p.m. ET Sunday) when a Toyota Corolla exploded in the city's west, Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danish told CNN.

It is the latest in a string of attacks in recent days by the Taliban, which said it had captured two districts in northern and central Afghanistan at the weekend.

In a statement released by Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid, the group said the Kabul bomb's target was a bus carrying Afghan intelligence staff, but Danish said that all the victims were civilians, including some employees of the Ministry of Mining and Petroleum. Women and children were among the dozens injured, Danish said.

Saleem Rasooli, head of Kabul hospitals, put the death toll at 29 and said at least 40 others were injured in the blast.

A witness told CNN he saw injured people in the streets and others yelling in the bombing's aftermath.

"In the morning I was sleeping when I heard a loud boom, which woke me up," said 33-year-old Safiullah, who gave only his first name.

He looked out of a window in his home and saw plumes of smoke rising from the site as people ran in a panic.

Afghanistan's Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah and President Ashraf Ghani both condemned the attack.

"I strongly condemn the terrorist attack on civil servants in Kabul today," Abdullah said in a tweet.

"Our security institutes will hold perpetrators accountable."

Ghani's office said in statement: "The enemy of Afghanistan can't face our forces in battle field so they target innocent civilians."

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned the attack, saying "the deliberate targeting of civilians constitutes a grave violation of human rights and international humanitarian law and may constitute a war crime."

The uptick in violence comes as President Donald Trump mulls sending more US troops to Afghanistan, amid no signs that the Taliban is weakening.

There are about 8,400 US troops in the country at the moment. The US counterterrorism mission there, which also fights ISIS, is separate from a NATO-led effort to train, advise and assist the Afghan army and police force to fight the Taliban.

CNN's Ehsan Popalzai reported from Kabul and Chieu Luu contributed to this report.

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29 dead in Kabul car bomb attack claimed by Taliban - CNN

A Peace ‘Surge’ to End War in Afghanistan – New York Times

The Taliban has long been willing to talk to the United States, but has resisted sitting down with the Afghan government, which it regards as a puppet regime. The Afghan government has been willing to talk to the Taliban, but wants to ensure its legitimacy is not eroded. The United States has worked only in fits and starts to build a format for talks and preliminary understandings to get substantive negotiations going. Americas primary focus on the war has contributed to an inconsistent peace effort.

For all parties to the Afghan conflict, building and sustaining commitment from leaders and support from broader constituencies for pursuing peace has been much harder than continuing the war. Each side wants to negotiate from a position of strength. Skepticism about the enemys willingness to negotiate has gotten in the way of willingness to test, probe and risk looking too eager.

A surge of United States commitment to negotiating a political settlement would not remove all the obstacles, but it is a prerequisite. A first step in this direction could be for President Trump to declare publicly his intent to make a peace deal. He could show his readiness to work out the details of a military withdrawal and emphasize the protection of United States national security interests in negotiations.

A strong and seasoned diplomatic team would be needed to carry out the presidents commitment. Unless negotiating peace is someones full-time job, there cant be adequate diplomatic vigor. He could support the appointment of an experienced and respected neutral mediator neither American nor Afghan who could seek to generate and sustain momentum for a peace process that will inevitably be buffeted by spikes in violence and wavering political attention spans.

In Afghanistan, unexceptionally, there are vested interests on all sides in continuing the war because of the resources conflict attracts, antipathies toward sharing power, and the difficulty of justifying compromise with an enemy against the backdrop of human losses and entrenched narratives.

The United States can surmount these hurdles by influencing the Talibans calculations through applying military pressure and offering political opportunity, and using our leverage with the Afghan political elite to ensure their commitment to negotiating.

The Taliban is violently opposed to the United States military presence on Afghan soil but does not have aspirations beyond Afghanistan. A peace deal could allow the United States to focus its resources on threats from the region that are directed toward the homeland and core American interests.

Pursuing peace is also the most effective way of managing the regions hedgers and spoilers. There is a consensus among Iran, Russia and Pakistan, as well as the more constructively minded Chinese, for a political settlement. Views on desirable terms no doubt differ, but this consensus is an opportunity for the United States.

Pakistan is the most problematic of the regional powers as it continues offering sanctuary to the Taliban. Pakistan wants a political arrangement in Afghanistan to be hospitable to its interests and inhospitable to Indian interests. But Pakistan would be inclined to support a political settlement that takes seriously its perception of its interests in its own neighborhood.

A peace deal wont happen quickly or easily. Unless it becomes a dominant focus of United States policy, it wont happen at all. If the Trump administration neglects a push for peace, American leaders could find themselves faced with the same choices as now or worse when the next strategy review comes around.

Laurel Miller, a senior foreign policy expert at the RAND Corporation, was a senior State Department official with responsibility for Afghanistan and Pakistan from 2013 to 2017.

A version of this op-ed appears in print on July 24, 2017, in The International New York Times.

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A Peace 'Surge' to End War in Afghanistan - New York Times

Mattis: Authority delegated by Trump in Afghanistan is tactical, not strategic – ArmyTimes.com

WASHINGTON Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis clarified on Friday that while DOD is setting troop numbers for Afghanistan, President Donald Trump is still setting the strategy that will drive those numbers.

What he delegated was a tactical decision about what forces to send, Mattis said of Trump. He delegated not one bit of the strategy by the way. Not one bit. That is his and his alone.

Theres still no strategy, although both the White House and Pentagon have said one is coming soon. However the lack of an overall strategy has not keptMattis from making tactical adjustments that support a more aggressive approach.

Weve changed what were doing, Mattis said. Weve moved some [troops] out that we dont need and put different ones in. Its not like weve just been stalled out here.

For months Trumps security team has been meeting on how to change the course of the now 16-year-old war. As part of that effort, Trump, Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson have made multiple trips to NATO to solicit additional troops from member countries.

The lack of an announced strategy has had the trickle-down effect of stalling commitments from some NATO members who want to know what the plan is before they commit to it.

We know there will be some allies who are willing to send more troops but again their troops are as precious to them as ours are to us, Mattis said. Weve got to get this thing right.

In June Trump delegated the authority to Mattis to set troop levels for Afghanistan, including increasing the current cap beyond the 8,400 U.S. troops now authorized.

The Pentagon is considering sending approximately 4,000 additional forces to Afghanistan to stem the countrys deteriorating security situation.

Im going to figure it out before [making a decision] Mattis said. The last thing I want to do is send troops in there and find I just sent troops in for something I just cancelled.

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Mattis: Authority delegated by Trump in Afghanistan is tactical, not strategic - ArmyTimes.com