After years of U.S.-led warfare, American commanders now insist their
Afghan counterparts take over the fight. But some Afghans don't seem
ready. Can transition work?
FULL STORY
|
PRINCE HARRY ON PATROL
January 22, 2013 -- Updated 1621 GMT (0021 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Frontline U.S. soldiers stepping back, forcing Afghans to step up
- Military's one-time 'shoulder-to-shoulder' policy with Afghan troops is now an 'after you' policy
- Some Afghans don't believe the U.S. will leave or that Afghans are ready to take their place
- But U.S. troops are already dismantling some bases
Editor's note: Douglas Wissing is an independent journalist and author of Funding the Enemy: How US Taxpayers Bankroll the Taliban (Prometheus Books). He is embedded with U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
Forward Operating Base Salerno, Afghanistan (CNN) --
As Presidents Barack Obama and Hamid Karzai parry over troop levels and
assistance, "retrograde" is the operant word I am hearing from U.S.
commanders in Afghanistan. A nuanced military term for withdrawal,
retrograde defines operations in this insurgency-plagued land.
After more than a decade
of U.S.-led warfare, American commanders are now insisting their Afghan
counterparts take over the fight.
The 101st Airborne
Division's Rakkasan Brigade is the battle-space owner of eastern
Afghanistan's restive Khost and Paktia provinces, both of which border
Pakistan's anarchic tribal regions.
In the brigade
headquarters at Forward Operating Base Salerno -- a building hardened
against rocket and mortar attack -- Rakkasan Deputy Commander Colonel
Tim Sullivan told me: "Our mission was to go from a partnered role with
the ANSF (Afghan National Security Forces) to an advise and assist role.
We kind of gave it the 'tough love' approach."
With the announced U.S. withdrawal in 2014, American officers have no choice but to push the Afghan security forces forward.
It's a big change for
Afghan commanders used to U.S. troops taking the lead, and accustomed to
having the formidable U.S. firepower and air support.
Turning off the lights in Afghanistan
Prince Harry describes deployment
Suicide bombers attack Afghan police
Sullivan talked of
turning down a cosseted Afghan commander who demanded helicopter
transport to one of his bases. "We fly them nowhere," Sullivan told me.
"It's a big transition. It has to happen. It's a clash of wills."
Sullivan is the right man
for the job. A hulking, gravel-voiced Brooklynite from an Irish
Catholic family of seven boys, Sullivan is a West Point graduate who has
served in Somalia, Haiti, Iraq and Afghanistan.
Sullivan and other U.S.
officers in Afghanistan talk about the need to transition to "Afghan
Good Enough" -- a sustainable Afghan security force that does it the
Afghan way.
The U.S. partnering
strategy of "Shohna ba Shohna" (Shoulder to Shoulder) has abruptly given
way to "After You," as Afghan security forces take the lead --
sometimes reluctantly.
"Across the A/O (Area of
Operations), I wouldn't paint a rosy picture," Sullivan says. "We've
had some very good success. We've had some moderate success. We have not
encountered any nightmares."
Across the insurgent
heartland of eastern and southern Afghanistan, there's a palletizing
fever as U.S. equipment is packed for shipment.
In military briefings, U.S. bases scheduled for imminent closure are highlighted on Powerpoint maps.
Long convoys of armored
vehicles are making their way back from forward bases as combat outposts
are closed or transferred to Afghan security forces.
Remaining U.S. bases are
groaning with the influx of transiting troops and contractors, housed
in new barrios of Alaska tents and "tin-can" metal housing pods.
Some bases are being
dismantled and returned to nature. Combat Outpost Tillman, named after
the NFL star and special forces soldier Pat Tillman who died in an
infamous friendly fire incident, was one of those closed.
"We scraped it clean," Sullivan said. U.S. anti-IED teams traveled north to blow up the watchtowers.
The base is now a soccer field, where Afghan boys play a wolfish style of football.
As Obama administration spokespersons float the big round trial balloon of zero troops in Afghanistan,
soldiers here talk about the spring 2013 drawdown of 20 percent of the
remaining 66,000 US troops, with another 50 percent to be gone soon
after.
How are the Afghans
responding to U.S. retrograde? Among some, there is clearly denial. They
simply can't imagine a country rich enough, or foolish enough, to just
walk away from the enormous investment poured into these bases, many
just built during the boom that accompanied Obama's troop surge.
Aid and development
money is drying up. I listened to one Afghan government farm worker in
insecure Zabul Province insist a U.S. military development team needed
to build a fence around a section of a U.S.-financed Afghan
demonstration farm.
The U.S. commander
patiently told the farmer he should ask his provincial agriculture
minister to do it. "We don't do projects anymore," the commander
repeatedly said. The farmer, who sported a bright gold wristwatch that
signifies inordinate wealth (and sometimes indicates Taliban ties),
retorted the ministry was "weak," so the American "friends" needed to do
it.
Many Afghans tell me
they are very pessimistic about post-2014 security. One Afghan who has
translated for U.S. forces in Khost Province for nine years says: "The
Afghan situation right now is kind of bad. If the American forces
withdraw from Afghanistan, I don't think the Afghan army is strong
enough to defend everybody."
He told me he hoped
coalition forces would keep training the Afghan security forces. "Right
now if the coalition forces would leave, it's going to be so hard for
the Afghan people."
Like many of his
colleagues, the educated interpreter, whose father was an Afghan
National Police general, is applying for a special U.S. immigration
visa.
Other Afghans are
getting angry. One U.S. commander in southern Afghanistan told me about
his Afghan counterpart flaring up when he learned American support was
being quickly scaled back. It's a dictum that "retrograde under contact"
(withdrawal under pressure) is among the most difficult of military
operations. At some point when troop levels have dropped, all a force
can do is protect itself.
As U.S. forces withdraw
after well over a decade of war, the insurgents have responded in
various ways. IEDs continue to be the weapon of choice. Media-magnet
complex attacks, such as the spectacular attacks on Kabul and Camp
Bastion when Prince Harry was stationed there, broadcast the insurgency
is still thriving.
In some formerly
insecure provinces such as Khost, insurgent attacks have diminished. I
asked Col. Sullivan about the contention that attacks dropped because
casualty-cautious U.S. commanders ordered fewer combat patrols.
Sullivan challenged the
idea that U.S. soldiers are not "out there," saying soldiers constantly
travel the roads on retrograde convoys.
"We're not finding the
mother lodes of caches (insurgent military supplies) when we go out," he
says. "We're not getting a fight."
Then I asked about the
assessment that Afghan insurgents are just husbanding their forces while
the U.S. withdraws. "Husbanding of forces," Sullivan quickly agrees. "I
might buy that."
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