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US stops training some Afghan forces after attacks

The training of some Afghan forces has been suspended while the US military review the process of vetting new recruits following a spike in deadly attacks on international troops last month.

File photo: Afghan Local Police listen to a speech at Gizab village of Uruzgan province south west of Kabul, Afghanistan.
File photo: Afghan Local Police listen to a speech at Gizab village of Uruzgan province south west of Kabul, Afghanistan.
Image: AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili

THE US MILITARY has suspended training of some Afghan forces while the Americans review the process of vetting new recruits following a spike in deadly attacks on international troops last month, officials said Sunday.

There have been 34 attacks by Afghan police or soldiers on their international allies so far this year — at least 12 in August alone. The members of the Afghan security forces have killed 45 international troops, putting intense strain on the relationship. The attacks have complicated a key pillar in the plan for the US-led coalition to withdraw by the end of 2014 — training Afghan forces to take the lead in securing their own country.

Lt. Col. Todd Harrell, a spokesman for US special operations forces in Afghanistan, said the Americans have halted training for at least a month of about 1,000 trainees of the Afghan Local Police (ALP), a government-backed militia that is under the authority of the national police but operates independently. He said the Americans are redoing background checks on the Afghans.

Re-vetting

“The training of the ALP recruits has been paused while we go through this re-vetting process to take a look at this process to see if there’s anything that we can improve,” Harrell said. “It may take a month. It may take two months. We don’t know.”

The United States and its allies have been training the Afghan army and police so that they can gradually take over security for the country by the end 2014. They hope to have about 350,000 Afghans trained and ready by the end of the year, and gradually have been putting them in the lead for security in parts of Afghanistan since last year.

Coalition authorities have said about 25 per cent of this year’s insider attacks had confirmed or suspected links to the Taliban. The militants have sometimes infiltrated the ranks of the Afghan army and police and in other cases are believed to have coerced or otherwise persuaded legitimate members to turn on their coalition partners.

The international forces in Afghanistan have been revisiting both security for their forces and re-examining the backgrounds of the Afghan forces in the wake of the recent attacks on international troops. The coalition has already been re-vetting Afghan soldiers returning from leave.

New members will still be recruited

US special operations forces are responsible for the 16,000-strong ALP and decided to stop training the new recruits among them while re-vetting them. The ALP already in the field, who have already been trained, will continue to operate as normal, Harrel said. The government will also keep recruiting new members, he said.

Col. Tom Collins, a spokesman for the international military coalition in Afghanistan, also said there was no set date to resume training of the ALP.

The pause in training was first reported by the Washington Post.

Harrell also disclosed for the first time on Sunday that the Americans last month suspended operations by the Afghan special forces last month to re-vet those soldiers for any potential ties to insurgents or any other indications that they might turn on their allies. He said the suspension lasted less than two weeks and that the forces have since resumed operations.

Harrell said he was not aware of any Afghan troops who were suspended or flagged for monitoring in that round of re-vetting.

The Post also reported that training of special operations forces had been halted. But a spokesman for the NATO training mission in Afghanistan, or NTM-A, which oversees this training, said there has been no such pause.

“There has been no halt in training with NTM-A assets as they relate to special forces,” said Maj. Steve Neta of the Canadian military. He also said no other training programmes involving the traditional military or police have been halted for re-vetting.

Special operations forces

The head of the Afghan special operations forces, Brig. Gen. Sayed Abul Karim, confirmed there has been no pause to the training of his forces. The programme to train Afghan special operations forces had already been on break for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which ended in late August, and had been scheduled to restart in mid-September.

“It will continue,” he said, adding it has not been halted. “After the 15th of September, we restart,” he added.

The most recent insider attack took place last week when an Afghan army soldier turned his gun on Australian soldiers, killing three of them and wounding two, the Australian military.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s office condemned an operation by international troops to catch the shooter, describing it as unilateral. He alleged it resulted in the deaths of two civilians — a 70-year-old man his 30-year-old son. Karzai’s office said in a statement late Saturday that the operation took place without the coordination or approval of provincial authorities and violated an agreement that calls on Afghan troops to lead night raids.

Nightraids

Night raids have been a contentious issue between Afghan and international forces because the Karzai administration insists that they often end up killing civilians and antagonise the population, while the international coalition has maintained that they are necessary for rooting out insurgents. The US military has struck an agreement to put Afghans at the head of its operations in villages, but there is no such agreement for the entire international coalition.

The international military alliance responded by saying that Afghan officials approved and supported the strike.

In a related incident, NATO said it arrested a Taliban insurgent who was responsible for the May 12 shooting of two members of the British military in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province in the south.

At the time the man was a member of the Afghan police. An accomplice was shot and killed at the scene. The man, who was not further identified, was arrested along with another suspected insurgent on Aug. 30 in the Hisarak district of eastern Nangarhar province.

Read: Double suicide attack kills 12 in Afghanistan>

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Comments (9 Comments)

  • The Taliban weren’t trained and equipped by the US and they didn’t even exist when Russia was in Afghanistan so it is incorrect to say they ‘beat the Russians back’. The Taliban were mainly students who had grown up in Pakistani refugee camps and whom had been heavily indoctrinated by Wahabi madrassa’s that were financed by the Gulf states. Their emergence coinicided with huge instability in Afghanistan as rival factions that WERE armed and trained by the U.S jostled for power in the new Afghanistan. The Taliban set out to restore order in an Afghanistan that was beset with violence, corruption and criminality and were a response to the aftermath of the Soviet withdrawal rather than the invasion.

    Reply
  • No worry man Afghanistan does have a very long and interesting story to tell. Even under the Russian invasion one of the benefits was education for the people. However once they got beaten back by the newly US armed and trained Taliban they ran a muck and dragged the country back decades by refusing education to women, enforcing sharia law and dismantling any temporary progress made by the afghani people. That’s not to condone the Russian invasion by any means by the way!!

    But it sure is a basin of irony and repetitive history. There are large sections of society who know better than to follow the Taliban. However they are few and far between as they are rooted out and killed. The only way out is through education but what hope do they have when their schools are limited to Sharia teachings?

    America needs to get out and allow the afghani people to govern themselves. But what’s the point if the Taliban just roll back in twice as harsh and strong? Damned if you do and damned if you don’t situation.

    Anyways who am i to bleat on, check out some novels/stories etc there are some amazing reads.

    Reply
  • Here’s an idea. Instead of trying to train a domestic military/militia, use the resources to build schools and colleges in an attempt to educate the people of Afghanistan. While the coalition are there they might as well do something to help the people. More guns is not the solution. No matter how much domestic military is built there will still be a resentment to the western world. At least if peoples lives are changed for the better through education then maybe Afghanistan will become more of a civilised place. Isn’t that the aim of the ‘democracy providers’ or are they just modern day crusaders?

    Reply
    • mattoid 02/09/12 #

      I think there are also plenty of resources being put into doing just that, but its not helped when the Taliban come along and kill the teachers and destroy the schools…

      Reply
    • The Taliban would just destroy any schools, hospitals etc built by the western forces. Education is the enemy of the Taliban , they want to keep the population living in the dark ages.

      Reply
    • I suppose you guys are right. But I still think that educating the masses will prevent the Taliban’s backwards beliefs from infecting what could be otherwise rational people. There must be a solution better than what is being implemented. How far could have Afghanistan progressed in the last decade of the focus wasn’t solely on war?

      Reply
    • Hmm you should probably read a bit more about the history of Afghanistan and the more recent invasion before commenting like that.

      Education especially education for females is being invested in once more. But history repeats itself time and time again when you’ve got the Taliban and Sharia laws. The only way to retain any progress made is through educating the locals and enduring they are protected by an intelligent well armed force. Otherwise teachers will be hung, beheaded and schools will be burned. It’s how it has been for 100′s of years for the afghani people. Their nation is divided by fundamentalists and supporters of the old ways.

      Very sad to see and I hope things will change for them regardless of how fruitless my head tells me it all is.

      Reply
    • OK fair enough. I see yer points and concede.

      Reply

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