Archive for October 10th, 2007

Spiegel Online: THE DISCOUNT WAR–ISAF Is Failing in Effort to Secure Afghanistan on the Cheap

SPIEGEL ONLINE – October 10, 2007, 05:29 PM
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,510674,00.html

By Ralf Beste, Konstantin von Hammerstein and Alexander Szandar

Germany’s parliament votes this Friday on whether to extend Berlin’s participation in the military mission in Afghanistan. The country is on the brink of disaster, but German politicians have chosen to ignore Afghanistan’s real problems.

Italian Brigadier General Fausto Macor is the ideal star witness to make the situation in Afghanistan dramatically clear to German politicians. The wiry general from the northern Italian city of Turin has been in charge of the Regional Command West of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan since July. He and his men are deployed in what is considered the quietest and safest part of the country.

Macor and his men are barricaded into an area near the airport in Herat, an old trading city of 250,000 inhabitants that has long served as a gateway to nearby Iran. Heavily armed Albanian soldiers guard the entrance to the camp, which is protected against enemy fire by a 1-meter-thick wall of boulders.

On Tuesday of last week, the general met with Eckart von Klaeden, the foreign policy spokesman of Germany’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU). Von Klaeden had traveled to the city with the German ambassador to Afghanistan, Hans-Ulrich Seidt.

The general is slightly delayed, having attended a memorial service for two Spanish soldiers who were killed the day before in a bomb attack 80 kilometers (50 miles) to the south. The service was broadcast live on Italian television to a distressed nation. NATO troops have just liberated two kidnapped Italian intelligence officers from Macor’s contingent. One of the Italians suffered serious injuries during the raid.
The commander sits in a chair, his back to the television set, and points to a military map on the wall. “You see,” he says, “I am responsible for an area half the size of Italy.” Then he rattles off the relevant statistics. Of the 1,800 soldiers under his command, only 270 can go on patrol. If he sends two units out on patrol, they can easily find themselves operating 400 kilometers (249 miles) apart. “It’s as if one of them were in Turin and the other in Venice,” says the general.

He can expect little support from the Afghan army, which has only 400 armed troops in the western sector. As a result, the general is left to his own resources as far as entire regions are concerned. He has no illusions. There is no power vacuum in Afghanistan: Taliban fundamentalists, armed tribal warlords or criminal gangs control the areas where there are no international troops.

In fact, the rule of law ends only a few hundred meters from Macor’s headquarters, where the commander of the Herat airport complains about his situation. Outside, the warm late autumn sun shines on the Italians’ gray Hercules transport aircraft. The mustachioed police colonel keeps his office cooled to a chilly 19 degrees Celsius (61 degrees Fahrenheit). The law requires that no armed soldiers be allowed on the airport grounds. The police colonel complains that his men, armed with only 30 old Kalashnikov automatic rifles, are poorly equipped to uphold the law at the airport.

This isn’t nearly enough firepower to deter the city’s powerful men, who often appear on the tarmac with scores of bodyguards armed with pistols, rifles and mobile grenade launchers. In front of the parked aircraft, rival private armies occasionally engage in violent gun battles, while the airport commander’s men are forced to look on helplessly.
Welcome to Afghanistan in the sixth year following the Western intervention. Welcome to a country that ranks, sadly, in eighth place in the 2007 edition of the “Failed States Index” compiled by the US magazine Foreign Policy — just behind Sudan, Iraq, Somalia and Zimbabwe. Welcome to Afghanistan, the country NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer has proclaimed a test case for the future operability of the world’s most powerful military alliance.

A troop withdrawal would be a “serious defeat for international law and the international community,” warns Peter Struck, the floor leader of Germany’s Social Democratic Party (SPD), while German Chancellor Angela Merkel believes that her country’s commitment to the operation in Afghanistan is “the only way to demonstrate that we fight terrorists, and that we do so with great resolve.” Welcome to one of the most controversial issues in German foreign policy.

This Friday, Germany’s parliament, the Bundestag, will vote on whether to extend two of the three German military mandates in Afghanistan, currently the Bundeswehr’s most dangerous mission. Twenty-one German soldiers have already lost their lives in Afghanistan, and last Friday three Germans were lucky to escape from a suicide attack with only minor injuries. The Bundestag will decide the fate of up to 3,500 soldiers and six Tornado reconnaissance aircraft operating in Afghanistan under the auspices of NATO’s ISAF force.

Parliament’s approval of the mission is considered a done deal, with a broad majority in both the ruling grand coalition and the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP) likely to vote in favor of keeping the troops in Afghanistan. Even a number of Green parliamentarians intend to support the measure, despite the party’s recent decision not to. Only the Left Party is strictly opposed to the Bundeswehr’s Afghanistan mission.

The future of Germany’s more controversial involvement in the US-led antiterrorism Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) will not be decided until November, after the SPD convention in Hamburg.

Relatively few members of parliament have traveled to Afghanistan in recent months to get a first-hand impression of the situation in the war-torn country, despite the fact that members of the German Bundestag are normally known for their love of travel. Apparently only very few of Germany’s elected representatives feel that Afghanistan is worth a visit.

The ones who choose to stay at home are acutely aware of why they do not want to be associated with the country. The mood among the German public has changed dramatically since the grand coalition took office two years ago. Whereas 60 percent of poll respondents approved of the Bundeswehr’s Afghanistan mission in the past, considerably more than half are openly pushing for a withdrawal today.
Although officials at the Chancellery insist that the country is at the top of the chancellor’s agenda, Angela Merkel studiously avoids being tainted by unpopular issues like Afghanistan. She expresses her support for Germany’s commitment to the shattered country from time to time, perhaps out of a sense of duty, but she has already withdrawn to the sidelines of the debate.

Her predecessor, former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, made two trips to the crisis-plagued region. Photo ops from Afghanistan were still considered desirable at the time. Merkel, on the other hand, prefers being portrayed as a climate change crusader, posing for the cameras in front of a glacier in Greenland or visiting a school in Ethiopia. But she has yet to make an appearance in Afghanistan. There have been many excuses for her apparent decision to shun the country, ranging from kidnappings to SPD conventions to a busy schedule.

The news that reaches Berlin from Afghanistan these days is simply too horrific. Members of parliament who have visited the country describe a place on the verge of collapse. Instead of declining, the problems of poverty, corruption, violence and sheer hopelessness are on the rise. Government institutions are virtually nonexistent in many parts of the country, the police are corrupt and overworked and the military isn’t in much better shape. The effects of Western development aid go largely unnoticed by much of the population.

The security situation is also becoming more and more precarious. More than 5,000 people were killed in attacks or combat during the first nine months of this year alone. According to a United Nations report, acts of violence have increased by close to 30 percent this year. Three-quarters of the attacks are directed against Afghan soldiers, police officers and foreign troops, “in a deliberate and calculated effort to impede the establishment of legitimate government institutions,” the UN report states.

The situation on the military front is unclear. In a Sep. 18 classified report labeled “Urgent” to the governments of European Union member states, the EU’s special envoy in Kabul, Spain’s Francesc Vendrell, identifies a “paradoxical trend.” “While ISAF is achieving significant military successes against the insurgents, especially as a result of targeted attacks on Taliban commanders,” Vendrell writes, “the unsafe zone in which the insurgents operate is growing.” Even a weak Taliban presence is sufficient, Vendrell continues, to bring “normal government activities to an end” and to bring large segments of the population under the influence of the insurgents.

Vendrell’s conclusions coincide with the results of a study by the Senlis Council, an international think tank, which conducted a survey in March of 12,000 Afghan men in the southern and eastern sections of the country, regions which have seen fierce fighting. The study’s conclusions were devastating. In late 2001, the vast majority of Afghans believed that the Taliban had been defeated once and for all. Today only half of those surveyed are convinced that international forces will win the war against the insurgents in southern Afghanistan. It appears that although the Taliban is unlikely to win the war militarily, it is increasingly emerging victorious in the battle for public opinion.

The loss of confidence in and respect for the international community has political consequences. EU envoy Vendrell reports, with some concern, on a written memo from the Afghan interior minister to all provincial governors and police commanders, in which they were instructed to refrain from visiting international aid organizations and civilian and military reconstruction teams in the future.

Although the consequences of the order would not be significant in practice, writes Vendrell, many of his Afghan contacts are concerned about the impression it conveys, namely that the level of trust between the government and the international community is declining. They also fear that “officials with connections to organized crime could gather incriminating material against non-corrupt officials because of harmless contacts.”

There is an odd disparity between the reality in Afghanistan and the political debate in Germany. Seemingly oblivious to the information coming from the country, both the Bundestag and the political parties become embroiled in heated debates over technical details that are in fact irrelevant in Afghanistan. The Green Party and the SPD, in particular, spent weeks in an enthusiastic debate about OEF, ISAF and the Tornado jets.

For many Greens and Social Democrats, the OEF anti-terrorism operation is the epitome of a merciless US-led bombing war that they claim is practically driving Afghans into the arms of the Taliban. At the Green Party convention in the central German city of Göttingen, the party base decided that it would no longer vote in favor of extending the Bundeswehr’s Afghanistan mission. The SPD’s leadership has scheduled the discussion of Afghanistan at its upcoming convention in Hamburg in late October for Saturday evening, timed to coincide with the popular sports broadcast “Sportschau” — apparently in an attempt to divert delegates’ attention away from the debate over OEF and the ISAF.

The debates being conducted in Berlin are essentially ersatz discussions — a not-uncommon tactic among German politicians. Last year, a swarm of self-proclaimed naval experts spent weeks debating the marginal issue of whether the German navy’s deployment off the Lebanese coast should remain outside a three-mile or a six-mile zone.

The important questions in the Afghanistan debate are also being ignored. For instance, how does one define success for the mission? Can a discount war — one that is being waged with a relatively minimal financial commitment — succeed in the long run? Shouldn’t the West, including Germany, increase its commitment to the mission? Should its goals be redefined? Or is it enough to provide the Afghan people with electricity, running water and a little freedom of opinion?

At least some politicians — those who focus on foreign affairs — are offering clear answers to many of these questions. Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, for example, says that the goal in Afghanistan is, of course, not to establish a “Westminster democracy” with the corresponding benefits of a social welfare state. Christian Democratic parliamentarian Ruprecht Polenz, the chairman of the Bundestag’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, consciously sets the bar low when he says: “The goal is to ensure that no more threats originate from within the Afghan state.”
In truth, this objective would represent a dramatic reversal of German policy. In 2002, then Chancellor Schröder insisted that the Afghans ought to be compensated for their “return to the civilized world” by providing them with an adequate “prosperity dividend.” The goal of the intervention, the Schröder administration explained, was to achieve human rights, democracy and prosperity for Afghanistan.

These noble objectives are rarely mentioned today. But which criteria must be fulfilled before the mission can be considered a success and the German troops and their allies can return home? No one knows. An exit strategy is “currently not in sight,” says one German NATO general.

“We won’t let the foreigners leave until our roads are built, our schools, electricity are built, until our police and army are better,” Afghan President Hamid Karzai said recently. Some at NATO perceive this statement as a threat. “Our assistance ends,” says German Defense Minister Franz Josef Jung, “when Afghanistan can find its way to a positive future on its own two feet.”

“NATO will have successfully completed its mission when the Afghan government and its security forces can take responsibility throughout the entire country,” NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer told SPIEGEL in a recent interview. But Scheffer is unwilling to make any predictions, except to say: “NATO will have to stay for the foreseeable future.”

Faced with a difficult situation, the allies are now placing their hopes on the plan to train 70,000 soldiers and 82,000 police officers by the next parliamentary election, in three years. The new mantra of the NATO member states, says Scheffer, is “training, training, training.” “Those who do not invest in training now,” says German General Egon Ramms, who runs the ISAF mission from the NATO command center in the Dutch town of Brunssum, “will have to stay that much longer.”

The Germans are eager to distance themselves from the United States in public debates, insisting that, unlike the Americans, the Germans are mainly involved in civilian reconstruction assistance. But this is precisely where Germany has failed miserably — in developing the Afghan police force, for example, for which Berlin has assumed primary responsibility. After visiting Afghanistan in the summer, a delegation of members of the Bundestag concluded that the work of the German contingent has been disastrous.

Germany, supposedly a “lead nation” in ISAF, has taken a leisurely approach to the Afghanistan effort. In January 2002, a team of high-ranking experts traveled to Afghanistan and recommended sending three German officials to Kabul to serve as advisors to the Afghan interior ministry. The German team, apparently convinced that this would be sufficient, envisioned the trio developing courses for senior bureaucrats and helping the Afghans improve their police academy. It recommended a one-year stint for the three officials. Aside from that, the experts concluded, the Afghans lacked equipment, cars and, most of all, weapons.

But weapons were precisely what the Afghans eventually acquired in abundance. It was an “absurdity,” said FDP parliamentarian Elke Hoff, that Berlin planned to supply Afghanistan with up to 100,000 firearms while denying the Afghan police simple equipment like handcuffs. Germany’s interior and foreign ministries refused to provide countries that fail to fully satisfy German constitutional standards with equipment designed to “exercise direct coercion.”

This defect is only being remedied now — a full five years after Germany launched its Afghan police training program. According to an internal report by the German foreign ministry, “500 officers of the Kabul riot police will soon be equipped with body armor, helmets, shields, gloves, batons and pepper spray.”

Even when the German team of advisors was later expanded to include 60 officials, generally only 40 of them were actually at work at any one time. In the wake of this embarrassing staffing debacle, officials at the interior ministry and chancellery are now quietly examining the possibility of developing a permanent team of specially trained police officers, federal prosecutors and administrative experts that could quickly be deployed to failed states to deal with similar crises. But this is little more than a pipe dream at this point.

Besides, the Americans aren’t interested in waiting for Germany to get its act together and have already taken over from the Germans in many respects. While Berlin agonized over the “further training of mid-level and senior officials” and “salary and rank reforms,” Washington deployed 2,500 troops as police trainers, backed up with hundreds of contractors working for DynCorp, a private security firm.

Managed by retired US generals, the DynCorp employees are training illiterate Afghans to work as police deputies in paramilitary crash courses. Their goal is to ensure that the men will be passable marksmen by the end of the training. The fact that many desert as soon as they complete the courses is seen as an unpleasant fact of life — but not as a blemish on DynCorp’s training statistics.

In the wake of their failures, the Germans are now trying to shift the responsibility for police training to the EU and distribute it among more countries. In May the EU formed its own police training mission, dubbed EUPOL, which has been managed so far by Friedrich Eichele, a German police general. Eichele, the former head of GSG 9, the counterterrorism unit of the German federal police, is a man of few words. His command of the English language is rudimentary and his diplomatic skills are considered limited.

Given such leadership, within only a few months EUPOL has already deteriorated into a directionless tangle of bureaucracy and financial weakness. EUPOL’s 195 EU police officers from 17 countries are not even scheduled to assume their new posts until next March. According to officials, this is the earliest possible date, since the group must first build new, and appropriately comfortable, lodgings for its officers.
All of two German police officers are currently assigned to assist the German reconstruction team in the provincial city of Kunduz, which includes more than 400 soldiers. EUPOL plans to replace the pair with five of its team members soon. The new team will be responsible for the training of 7,500 Afghan police officers in two provinces. In the face of such realities, Guido Westerwelle, the head of the FDP, couldn’t help but comment sarcastically on the program while visiting Afghanistan two weeks ago: “Well, that certainly takes care of police development.”

Despite the efforts of German and British advisors, the interior ministry in Kabul is considered a hotbed of corruption. It costs up to $150,000 in bribes to secure a position as a district police chief. But the investment is worthwhile. Once on the job, a police chief can easily recoup the money from his subordinates.

General Dan McNeill, the American commander of ISAF, likes to entertain visitors to his headquarters in Kabul with small anecdotes from the everyday lives of the Afghan police. He recently instructed his Afghan underlings to set up 20 checkpoints along the road between Kabul and Kandahar. “Which police checkpoints?” a wide-eyed Afghan asked McNeill a few weeks after the initial order. “Oh,” the Afghan quickly realized, “you mean the new tollbooths.”

Wherever one looks in Afghanistan, officials are busy skimming off their cuts. In fact, police officers often exist only on paper. Local police chiefs line their pockets by collecting funds from the international community’s coffers to pay the salaries of nonexistent officers. To add insult to injury, the officers that do exist are paid miserably to perform their life-threatening jobs. At the paltry salary of $70 a month, many police officers complete basic training and then promptly desert to join the private militias of wealthy warlords and drug barons, or even the Taliban. At $400 to $600 a month, the competition pays a lot more than the police.

The situation is hardly any better in the military. According to NATO statistics, 38,000 soldiers have already been trained with Western assistance, a process that will take years and is expected to eventually produce 70,000 soldiers. But these figures do not reflect the real situation.

Last Wednesday, for example, the US commander in charge of training gave a memorable performance at the NATO Council in Brussels. The NATO ambassadors attending the meeting asked Major General Robert Cone, who was in Kabul but was taking part in the session via videoconference, how many men in the Afghan army are now ready for combat.

The general responded that while the goal was to train 70,000 men, 50,000 are already being paid. But, he added, many of these men are simply AWOL (“absent without leave”). In other words, they are either deserters or men who occasionally choose to stay at home instead of appearing for duty. Besides, Cone added, he is having trouble retaining the men who have been trained. The actual force, he told the NATO officials, presumably consists of about 30,000 men, but he was unable to provide them with a more precise figure.

But the ambassadors were insistent. How many of those men are ready for combat? “I really can’t say,” the general said. Finally he admitted the truth: “To be perfectly honest — zero.”

In fact, Cone continued, not a single Afghan unit is capable of independently running an operation. According to Cone, the Afghan military lacks everything from artillery to helicopters, military hospitals, reconnaissance equipment and support personnel.

This explains why Afghan Defense Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak tells every Western visitor that what he needs most are weapons. A few Leopard 1 tanks would be nice, the portly general told CDU parliamentarian von Klaeden two weeks ago in an effort to solicit more German support, but the modern Leopard 2 wouldn’t be so bad, either.

For NATO officers, Wardak’s tank fantasies are nothing short of ridiculous. The general, they complain, only wants the expensive combat machinery so that he can stage an impressive military parade. Besides, they add, experience has shown that most Western weapons deliveries to the Afghan army quickly end up on the black market.

The results of the international community’s reconstruction efforts have been so sobering that many, including Foreign Minister Steinmeier, are calling for a rethink of Germany’s commitment in Afghanistan. Berlin cannot afford to continue its current policy, he explained in the summer. He called for a stronger German commitment, saying that more troops, more police officers and more development aid are necessary.

But such calls for action have done nothing to change the situation. The state of the police training effort remains miserable, while Defense Minister Jung is obstructing efforts to increase the Bundeswehr contingent from 4,000 to 5,000 men — a move both the Foreign Ministry and the Chancellery have endorsed. The team of 400 military trainers Steinmeier wants to see sent to Afghanistan will likely be reduced to no more than 180. But he does see progress in reconstruction aid: The German government has increased its annual funding of the program from €80 million to €125 million.

For Bruce Riedel, a member of the National Security Council at the White House until 2002, all of these efforts, including those of other Western nations, are a disgrace. “We have tried to rebuild a country devastated by a quarter century of wars, invasion and terror on the cheap,” he said in a recent interview. “Instead of a massive economic reconstruction effort akin to the Marshall Plan of the 1940s, Afghans have gotten less economic aid on a per capita basis than Haitians or Bosnians.”

His verdict on the Bush administration’s approach? “Like trying to put a Band-Aid on a chest wound.”

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

Add comment October 10, 2007

RFE/RL: Ring Road’s Completion Would Benefit Entire Region

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

By Ron Synovitz

October 10, 2007 (RFE/RL) — Financing is in place and construction is expected to begin soon on the last remaining section of Afghanistan’s “Ring Road,” a highway that loops the rugged mountain terrain and sparsely populated countryside to connect its major cities.

The Ring Road was conceived in the 1960s as a highway that makes a giant circle within the country to link its major cities. Secondary roads are meant to link provincial capitals and smaller towns to the Ring Road — much like the spokes of a bicycle wheel.

But despite its name, the Ring Road has never been a proper ring. War broke out in the 1970s before the northern section of the Ring Road was built. And in the decades of fighting that followed, large stretches of the existing 3,000-kilometer highway fell into disrepair or were destroyed.

A main focus of internationally backed reconstruction since the collapse of the Taliban regime in late 2001 has been to repair the existing highway and finish building the remainder of the Ring Road.

But it wasn’t until October 2 that a loan to finance the final section of unbuilt highway was announced by the Asian Development Bank — a stretch passing though mountainous terrain in northwestern Afghanistan near the border with Turkmenistan.

“We’re providing $176 million, along with the government of Afghanistan, which is also contributing $4 million,” says Brian Fawcett, the Asian Development Bank’s country director for Afghanistan:

“And this will be for the road from Bala Murghab to Leman, which is 143 kilometers,” he adds. “This section of road will almost complete the Ring Road. The government of Saudi Arabia and the Islamic Development Bank will do [the financing for the 50-kilometer section] from Leman to Amalick. And then the complete Ring Road will be finished.”

Still Much To Do

The bank describes the Ring Road as the “backbone” of Afghanistan’s transportation network, and its completion will be a major milestone for internationally backed reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan.

But Fawcett tells RFE/RL’s Radio Free Afghanistan it is unlikely the work will be finished by the proposed deadline in the Afghan National Development Plan, a strategy that was approved at a conference of international donors in London in April 2006.

“First, the [Afghan] government has to recruit the consultant for the project. And then, after the consultant finalizes the design of the road, then the contractor will be recruited,” Fawcett says. “So I think that the work will start, perhaps, in the first quarter of 2008. And the work will take 2 1/2 years to complete.”

Fawcett says the security of consultants and construction workers is a concern that the Asian Development Bank has raised with the Afghan government. He says the Interior Ministry has responded by sending additional police to Badghis Province and the northeastern part of Herat Province, where the work is to take place.

Regional Economic Impact

Niklas Swanstrom is a specialist on Central Asia and director of the Institute for Security and Development Policy, an independent think tank in Stockholm, Sweden. He says that the completion of the Ring Road will be a major benefit not only to Afghanistan but also to the former Soviet republics of Central Asia.

“The reason why it hasn’t been completed is, first of all, financing. It’s tremendously difficult to get good finances. And then, of course, the political situation has been very unstable. So even if you had financing, you would have a problem securing the actual construction of the Ring Road,” Swanstrom says.

“The consequences of this have been very negative,” he says. “Afghanistan has been a crucial factor in the whole economic equation of Central Asia. There have been estimates, for example, that the impact of [completing the Ring Road along with] all the regional network of trade would be 771,000 full-time jobs. It would be immense. It would be very positive.”

Swanstrom sees the Afghan Ring Road within the larger scope of infrastructure and transportation projects aimed at improving trade ties in the entire region.

“Financially, it will be very important if Afghanistan can act as a link for the Central Asian states toward” a seaport like Karachi in Pakistan, he says. “Trade could increase tremendously. I don’t think the impact will be that large in the initial stage.

“You have to connect Afghanistan with Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and, more importantly, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan — because that’s really where the economy comes from. Then you have the Persian-speaking crescent [of Iran, northern Afghanistan, and Tajikistan]. For the Iranians, I don’t think we should exaggerate the geopolitical impact of this network. On the contrary, I think the Iranians will struggle very hard to actually get the same benefits as many other countries.”

Other Infrastructure Still Needed

Swanstrom says that with no railroad network in Afghanistan, completion of the Ring Road will aid Afghans enormously. But he says there are other benefits than simply making overland travel within the country easier.

“Afghanistan’s exports will increase by 54 percent over the next five years,” Swanstrom says. “Very much of that is through agriculture. And you will see quite substantial job creation — long-term employment. It is also an increase in freight. Transit trade. Cotton going from Uzbekistan into Afghanistan and shipped all over the world. And, of course, if you can have oil and gas transit through Afghanistan, that’s where the major gains will be made for Afghanistan in particular. “

But although Swanstrom says the development of transit corridors is “all good,” he says there is one potentially negative aspect of completing the Ring Road and tying it into the highway networks of neighboring countries — the possible strengthening of organized criminal groups in Afghanistan and Central Asia.

“With this new infrastructure development, it will be much easier for the Afghani drug lords to transport heroin and opium from Afghanistan to the rest of the region. That’s something that needs to be dealt with because it’s going to be very, very difficult to handle it,” he says.

“We need to construct new institutions — legal institutions. We have to strengthen the police, the military, the drug-enforcement agencies. We have to make sure that judges and political leaders are uncorrupt,” he adds. “That’s a huge commitment not only from Afghanistan and the Central Asian states, but also from the international community. And we haven’t done much. We’re looking at the restructuring of much of the Afghan institutions. That’s fundamental.”

(RFE/RL’s Radio Free Afghanistan correspondent Ayaz Barhar contributed to the story from Kabul.)

Add comment October 10, 2007

AFP: Attack thwarted on ISAF change of command ceremony at Herat airport

(AFP)
10 October 2007KABUL – Gunmen opened fire on people praying in a remote village’s mosque in central Afghanistan, killing two men, while a mullah was gunned down separately in new Ramadan attacks, police said Wednesday.

In the west of the country, meanwhile, security forces discovered three rockets set to be fired on a ceremony attended by senior Afghan and NATO officials at a military air base outside the city of Herat.

The mosque attack happened late Tuesday in Sayed Abad district of Wardak province just south of the capital, Kabul, provincial deputy police commander Mohammad Asif Banwal told AFP.Two people, including a teacher, were killed while 10 others were wounded, all of them ‘innocent villagers’, he said.He blamed the attack on ‘enemies of peace’—a reference to the Taleban who have been waging an insurgency since their ouster from government in late 2001.Separately, unknown gunmen shot a mullah, or cleric, the same day in Logar province also bordering Kabul, the interior ministry said in a statement.The mullah died of severe wounds on his way to the hospital, it said, without saying who might have been behind the shooting.The Taleban said before Ramadan began mid-September that they would step up their attacks during the holy fasting month. They have since claimed responsibility for several deadly suicide attacks.Police have launched a hunt for the attackers in the surrounding villages, Banwal added.The ready-to-be fired rockets were found Wednesday as Afghan and NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) officials gathered to attend a change-of-command ceremony in Herat Air Base, police said.‘The rockets were apparently set to target the ceremony,’ local government official Ghulam Hazrat Hazrati told AFP. They were a couple of kilometres from the air base.The Taleban were removed from power in a US-led invasion six years ago.But they are the main group behind an increasingly bloody insurgency that is trying to topple the US-backed government in Kabul and force out tens of thousands of foreign troops here to help the administration.

Add comment October 10, 2007

DPA: Enthusiasm for Afghan deployment waning in many countries

Oct 10, 2007, 11:08 GMT

Almost 40 countries have committed troops, police and aid workers to the pacification and reconstruction of Afghanistan since the US- led operation to oust the Taliban began in October 2001.

As early as December of that year, the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1386, setting up the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) to secure the Kabul region.

But in the face of mounting death tolls, soaring poppy production and only scant evidence of progress on the reconstruction front, enthusiasm for the deployment is fading in many countries.

Apart from the costs – economic and human – many Europeans are concerned their countries could become targets for the kind of terrorist attacks seen in Madrid in March 2004 and London in July the following year.

NATO-led ISAF is the largest allied operation and was originally intended to provide security and reconstruction, although its mandate has been extended to include combat operations against the Taliban in the south of the country.

The US-led Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) is primarily an anti- Taliban operation, while there are other allied missions such as the European Union police mission.

In total, there are reported to be some 50,000 foreign forces of all kinds in Afghanistan.

The United States and Britain have the largest deployments – 23,000 and 6,700 respectively – and have taken the worst casualties. The US has lost 449 and Britain 82, but political support for the campaign remains broad-based in both countries.

The US has pressured Germany and France to play a larger role in combating resurgent Taliban militants in southern Afghanistan and to lift rules that limit troops to a peacekeeping role in relatively safe areas.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown is firmly committed to the mission and plans to raise the number of British troops to 8,000 by the end of the year.

‘If the Taliban were to take over in Afghanistan, the whole of the civilized world would be affected,’ Brown said recently. ‘We must support American and NATO forces in Afghanistan.’

British commanders have spoken of a 30-year ‘marathon mission.’

The situation is very different in Canada. The loss of 71 soldiers, largely in heavy fighting in the southern province of Kandahar, from a relatively small deployment of 2,500, has led to a strong swing in public opinion against the mission.

Initially 80 per cent of Canadians were in favour, but the latest renewal of the mandate in 2006 just squeaked through parliament.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has assured the US that Canadian troops will remain at least until February 2009, but after that he faces parliamentary hurdles amid growing public resistance.

Germany has the third-largest deployment at 3,500, but its troops are confined to the relatively peaceful north away from the main anti-Taliban operations and to flying reconnaissance missions.

The Germans have lost 25, 14 to attacks and the rest to accidents. While the major political parties continue to back the deployment, polls show a small majority in favour of pulling the troops out, despite broad political backing for the mission.

France, which has its forces deployed mainly in the Kabul region, has lost a dozen. In August President Nicolas Sarkozy announced an increase in the French effort to train the Afghan army, raising the total to 1,150.

In a show of commitment that is increasingly rare among allies weary of commitments to Iraq and Afghanistan, Sarkozy said recently: ‘I am more determined than ever to continue the struggle against terrorism.’

Poland and the Netherlands are two countries with substantial numbers of troops committed, despite strong opposition among the general population.

Poland has some 1,200 troops deployed in the south-east, with Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski committed to continuing the mission.

But public opposition is estimated at above 80 per cent, even though casualties have thus far been minimal.

Most Dutch want their almost 1,700 troops home by August next year, when the current mandate expires, with only 30 per cent backing an extension.

Against this background, parliament is to decide this month whether to renew the mission to the volatile Oruzgan Province south- west of Kabul, where 11 have been killed, six in hostile incidents.

The Australians have committed 970 troops, mainly to supporting the Dutch in Oruzgan. Political and popular support for the mission remain strong.

Italy has 2,300 soldiers deployed in Kabul and the western province of Herat on the Iranian border.

Parliament voted in March to extend the mandate, but Prime Minister Romano Prodi’s nine-party coalition government is divided, with leftists calling for a pull-out.

Keen to be seen as a staunch NATO member, Turkey’s political class is strongly behind continuing the mission of the more than 1,000 troops providing logistics and communications in the Kabul region.

But this remains true only as long as its forces stay out of the shooting war. There is little or no public debate on the deployment.

© 2007 dpa – Deutsche Presse-Agentur

Add comment October 10, 2007

USInfo: Afghanistan Carpet Industry Prepares for Global Market

02 October 2007

Increased sales could reduce lures of terrorism, poppy growing

By Phillip Kurata
USINFO Staff Writer

Washington — Afghanistan’s drive to resurrect its fabled carpet industry with U.S. assistance is a key element in the economic reconstruction of the land-locked Central Asian country, according to U.S. officials.

The Afghan carpet industry employs more than 1 million people, about 3 percent of the population. Millions more work in related industries, such as wool production, cutting, washing and design. Because these dominant industries have significant growth and export potential, the carpet sector has become a major focus for Afghanistan’s government and private-sector support organizations.

In 2005, Afghanistan sold abroad $140 million worth of carpets, its largest official export. If the country could repatriate the portion of its carpet industry that has migrated to Pakistan, the size of the industry would double, according to a study commissioned by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Projected to grow 11 percent a year, Afghan carpet exports could reach $350 million by 2015, according to the study.

For centuries, Afghanistan was recognized as a global leader in carpet production. But after the Taliban took power, many Afghan carpet makers fled to Pakistan. Since the Taliban were defeated in 2001, some 60 percent of the carpet makers who fled have returned to their homeland and are producing goods of exquisite beauty.

A recent article published by a newspaper in Pittsburgh described how Afghan women weavers are channeling their artistic talents into carpets because weaving is one of their few outlets for expression. The article described one woman weaver who created the design of a falling leaf to symbolize her loss of a child.

Unfortunately, just a small fraction of Afghanistan’s intricate and beautiful rugs are sold abroad as Afghan products. The reason for this is that more than 90 percent are sent to Pakistan for cutting, washing and finishing. Those carpets are exported to foreign markets with labels that say “made in Pakistan.”

The Commerce Department’s director of the Iraq and Afghanistan investment and reconstruction task force, Susan Hamrock Mann, says, “We’re helping Afghanistan get its identity back and return the entire production to Afghanistan so that they can start stamping the carpets made in Afghanistan.”

In January, the Commerce Department orchestrated the first Afghan carpet exhibition in the United States in Atlanta.

A media commentator wrote afterwards, “I’ve never seen anything quite like what I saw in Atlanta last week at the January rug show. Because it wasn’t just another bunch of people selling another bunch of products. It was a group of people trying to change the world.”

Carpet makers changing the world? As the commentator explains, his assertion was not far-fetched.

“It doesn’t take an economics major to figure out that if the business climate improves over there because we are buying more of their products, then perhaps the Afghan people will be more focused on business than on some of the other things that have torn that country apart over the past 25 years,” he writes. “Making rugs is a lot easier, safer and productive than making war or making drugs.”

To burnish the allure of Afghan carpets at the Atlanta show, the Commerce Department arranged for rug merchants to exhibit artifacts, art work, and other textiles along with rugs to give the customers a flavor of the country’s exotic culture.

Working with the Afghan government, the department helps Afghan rug merchants and government officials deal with import procedures into the United States, marketing, wholesalers, financing, transport and other issues, according to Hamrock Mann. The director and her colleagues played a key role in supporting the first Afghan International Carpet Fair, which took place in Kabul August 26-28. By the end of the third day of the fair, $3 million in sales had been rung up. Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, who led the U.S. delegation, said, “The industry is expected to grow substantially over the coming years, and this event is a truly historic moment in the re-emergence of Afghanistan in the global carpet market.”

The next major event in the Commerce Department’s efforts to integrate the Afghan carpet industry into the global market is an international rug show in Las Vegas January 28-February 1, 2008.

“There is a lot of money and many Afghan Americans in the West of the United States,” Hamrock Mann said. “We’re working on having Afghanistan as a key feature of the show.”

(USINFO is produced by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
http://usinfo.state.gov/xarchives/display.html?p=washfile-english&x=20071001152413liameruoy0.1086542&m=October

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