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Getting to Know Afghanistan -- 8 Years Late
It's incredibly arrogant that after so long the United States argues that it knows what to do in Afghanistan while, at the same time, admitting in public that it has barely the faintest idea about how the country really works, says Robert Dreyfuss.
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| Wednesday, October 7,2009 21:29 | |||||||||
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One of the most shocking things about General Stan McChrystal's leaked "Commander's Initial Assessment" about the war in Afghanistan is how bluntly he admits that the US occupation authorities, ISAF (the NATO International Security Assistance Force), and Centcom know little about the country they've invaded.
A. No. Q. They don't? A. There are maps, but especially down south, very serious micro-level maps that get down to sub-tribes and clans, relationships with criminal organizations, no. That's being built at the moment. Q. Maybe you just haven't seen them? A. Completely on background, I have Top Secret SCI clearances. I'm telling you. Q. So why is it seven years into this ….? A. Well in some areas, like Assadabad, the PRT's [Provincial Reconstruction Teams] are there…. Q. But without this map… A. You can't do anything we've talked about. At the very least, linking up with local Afghans. The NDS, Afghanistan's intelligence service, the ministry of interior, especially when you get into the provinces, there's an NDS chief for the province, and he's got a range of NDS operatives, they'll definitely know, because they're from the province. It also means linking up with the Afghan government, especially the intelligence service. Q. So they're local intelligence people are actually rooted in the area and they know who these people are? A. Absolutely! Q. So we have to trust them. We can't reconstruct a map if they've got one. A. Yes. That is exactly what we have to do. The United States isn't in all areas. There are some United States forces in and around Qalat, along the ring road. But for the most part, in the south, in Kandahar, some Canadian forces, in Helmand, mostly British, but they're in the northern parts. So huge chunks of Farah, of Helmand, of Kandahar, northern Zabul, chunks of Uruzgan: no forces. No mapping. And this is the heart of the insurgency. So now we're sending some Marines down south. And we'll start mapping. Seven years into the insurgency.
Robert Dreyfuss is a contributing editor to The Nation magazine, and the author of Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam (Metropolitan). |
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tags: Afghanistan / Obama / US / NATO / ISAF / Kandahar / Obama
Posted in Obama |
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