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: Afghanistan
US pushes military build-up in Afghanistan as armed resistance
escalates
By Peter Symonds
29 August 2005
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Under strong pressure from Washington, a number of countries
have been building up troop numbers to bolster the US-led occupation
of Afghanistan. While nominally to provide security for parliamentary
elections due to take place on September 18, the military build-up
is taking place amid a sharp escalation of armed resistance to
the US presence that has led to a rising toll of casualties.
A US soldier was killed and four others injured when a roadside
bomb struck their armoured vehicle in Khayr Kot district of Paktika
province on Friday. The previous weekend another four American
troops died in Zabul province when a large remote-controlled bomb
exploded under a wooden bridge as their convoy was crossing. More
than 65 US soldiers have been killed so far this year, most in
combatby far the worst toll since the US-led intervention
began in October 2001.
US troops are conducting extensive operations aimed at hunting
down insurgents and intimidating the local population prior to
the poll. After four years of attacks and aerial bombardment,
searches and arbitrary arrests, much of the Pashtun majority in
the south and east of the country is deeply hostile to the occupation
and the US puppet regime headed by President Hamid Karzai in Kabul.
The US military last week completed a major offensive in eastern
Kunar province near the Pakistani border and announced that more
than 40 enemy had been killed. The sweep was clearly
a reprisal for the killing of three US special forces troops in
an ambush in the same area in June. Another 16 US military personnel
sent to rescue the troops died when their helicopter was shot
down.
According to Associated Press, the US and Afghan officials
claim to have killed more than 750 insurgents over the last six
months. Nearly 200 civilians and about 100 Afghan security forces
have also died. Many of the so-called enemy deaths may well have
been civilian casualties as US officials routinely dismiss statements
by villagers who have been the victims of US attacks.
On August 12, for instance, the New York Times reported
the results of a raid by a US warplane on the remote village of
Mara Kale in southern Afghanistan. According to survivors in a
Kandahar hospital, four people died in the attack. Muhammad Yar
told the newspaper that his mother had been killed and his house
destroyed in the raid. US military spokesman Colonel James Yonts
responded by declaring that he doubted that there were any civilian
casualties as the area was uninhabited.
Attacks on US and allied forces in Afghanistan are not on the
scale of Iraq and receive scant coverage in the US and international
media. Nevertheless, nearly four years after the US toppled the
Taliban regime, there are large areas of the country outside the
control of US-led military forces and the armed opposition is
becoming more organised. Jean Arnault, UN special envoy to Afghanistan,
recently told the UN Security Council that an end to violence
in the country remains a distant goal.
In response to the latest wave of attacks, the Pentagon rushed
in an airborne infantry battalion of about 700 troops from Fort
Bragg. There are now more than 21,000 troops, including 3,100
soldiers from 19 other nations, under direct US command in Afghanistan.
Another 9,300 troops under NATO command form the International
Security Assistance Force (ISAF) based mainly in Kabul.
Both forces are due to expand significantly. Britain announced
in June that it was preparing to scale down the number of troops
in Iraq in order to play an expanded role in Afghanistan. Any
new contingent will initially join US forces in the south and
east of the country prior to the British military assuming the
ISAF leadership in May. The Australian government has committed
nearly 200 special forces soldiers who are due to arrive in Afghanistan
shortly to take part in US-led operations.
Earlier this month, NATO has announced that the ISAF would
be bolstered by 2,000 more troops and would assume greater operational
responsibilities. The bulk of the new troops are to be provided
the Netherlands, Romania, Italy, Austria and the US. Initially
confined to the capital, the ISAF expanded its operations into
the north and more recently into the west of the country.
For governments that have been compelled to distance themselves
from the US occupation of Iraq, committing troops to Afghanistan
has been a useful means for mending bridges with the Bush administration
and expanding their own international military role. Out of the
media spotlight, the German government, which, under the pressure
of public opinion, was critical of the US invasion of Iraq, has
nearly 2,000 troops in Afghanistancurrently the largest
contingent.
The Spanish Socialist Party-led government, which pulled troops
out of Iraq in April last year, has about 800 soldiers in Afghanistan.
After 17 troops were killed in a fatal air crash earlier this
month, the government in Madrid reaffirmed its determination to
maintain its force in Afghanistan, despite public opposition and
protests calling for their withdrawal.
Fraud of elections
The build-up of NATO troops is taking place under the guise
of protecting parliamentary elections and helping with humanitarian
projects. Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRT) have been dispatched
to major cities in the north and west of the country and are currently
being expanded into the south. Canadian troops have established
a PRT in Kandahar and others are to operate in Nimroz and Hilmand.
The government of Prime Minister John Howard in Canberra has indicated
that it may send several hundred Australian troops next year as
part of a PRT.
As is the case in Iraq, the Bush administration has declared
that the enemies of democracy are responsible for
the escalation of armed opposition in Afghanistan. Such claims
are a farce. With the blessings of the UN Security Council, Washington
manipulated the constitutional and electoral processes to ensure
that political power is concentrated in the hands of its loyal
puppet President Karzai.
Under the constitution, which was rubberstamped by an undemocratic
loya jirga or tribal assembly, the national assembly has
limited control over the president and his appointed ministers.
Elections for the national assembly have been delayed for more
than a year leaving Karzai in complete charge of government policy.
The situation is unlikely to change substantially after the elections.
Karzai, with the backing of US ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad,
scrapped the 2004 draft electoral law against the advice of UN
advisers and in May imposed a new voting system. Under the revised
law, political parties will not be able to display party symbols
or run party lists. The Single Non-Transferable Voting system
means that a large vote for a high-profile leader will undermine
the ability of other party candidates to be elected. The system
will benefit those tribal leaders, militia commanders and warlords
who command local support either through bribery, intimidation
or ethnic and tribal loyalties.
By deliberately undercutting political parties, Karzai is counting
on a national assembly that is deeply divided and thus politically
impotent. Around 2,800 candidates are standing for just 249 assembly
seats and another 3,000 are running for positions on 34 provincial
councils. As a result of a lack of resources and adequate security,
campaigning by most parties and candidates has been limited. As
in the presidential poll last October, Karzai and his allies have
the distinct advantage of being in power and thus in command of
the governments resources.
The International Crisis Group concluded in a report last month:
Little groundwork has been laid for legislative or locally
devolved bodies. Instead all the eggs of state have been put in
the basket of one man, the chief executive, President Hamid Karzai.
Indeed the political environment created over three and a half
years of transitional process must call into question the ability
of the new representative bodies to have a real voice in the future
of Afghanistan.
Having installed their man in the presidency, the Bush administration
is now pushing allies to take over the task of suppressing opposition
to the occupation. Commenting on the current buildup and operations,
Lieutenant General Karl Eikenberry, senior US commander in Afghanistan,
told the media last week: Its not just about election
day. We have been staying on the offensive over the summer months.
We will be fighting all the way through the election and beyond.
Earlier this month, NATO General Gerhard Back announced that
NATO forces would assume responsibility for security throughout
Afghanistan by the end of the year. To deal with the upsurge of
fighting, Back said that NATO would require more robust
rules of engagement. Some US troops would come under NATO command
but increased contingents from other countries will allow the
Pentagon to wind back its numbers in Afghanistan either to bolster
its forces in Iraq or to prepare for new military adventures elsewhere.
See Also:
Afghans besiege US base to
protest arrests
[28 July 2005]
US military reprisal in Afghanistan
kills 17 civilians
[8 July 2005]
Helicopter downing highlights
upsurge in Afghan armed resistance
[4 July 2005]
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