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US looks to Iraq strategy for Afghanistan

Iran concerned about Afghan security
Tehran (UPI) Aug 23, 2010 - Iran is concerned about Afghan President Hamid Karzai's pronouncements about banning private security firms. Iran, which shares a 582-mile border with its eastern neighbor Afghanistan, has lost more than 3,000 security officers in the past decade its battle with Afghan drug smugglers. Iran's contribution to Western anti-drug policies has largely been overlooked in the West. Karzai's decision followed consultations with high-ranking security officials, including his defense and interior ministers and the director of the National Directorate of Security, during which he requested that they provide detailed information about the firms and a strategy for how to close these companies.

Iranian analyst Sayed Abas commented that Karzai's government doesn't have a coherent strategy on the use of Afghan private security companies, Voice of the Islamic Republic of Iran radio reported Sunday. During an interview, Abas said: "Private companies were established because there was a need. It was mainly because police and army forces were not in a position to provide good security services to foreign and private companies, in particular to diplomatic missions. Therefore, the establishment of these companies was justified but private companies became a hot issue after the government lost control of these companies.

"You may remember that in 2004 or 2005 a foreign private security company was running a prison and was independently working for a U.S. spy agency. Some months later members of some companies were caught on different charges such as kidnapping, armed robbery, cooperation with insurgents. However, the government was never in a position to take a firm action against these companies because of their importance to the security of foreign and private bodies. Along with upsurge in insecurity, the number of private companies also increased and today there are more than 100 of these companies."

The same day that Abas made his observations Karzai appeared on ABC's "This Week," justifying his decision, stating: "The more we wait the more we lose. Therefore we have decided as an Afghan government to bring an end to the presence of these security companies ... who are not only causing corruption in this country but who are looting and stealing from the Afghan people. "One of the reasons that I want them disbanded and removed by four months from now is exactly because their presence is preventing the growth and development of the Afghan security forces -- especially the police force -- because if 40,000, 50,000 people are given more salaries than the Afghan police, why would an Afghan ... man come to the police if he can get a job in a security firm, have a lot of leeway without any discipline? So naturally our security forces will find it difficult to grow. In order for our security forces to grow these groups must be disbanded."
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Aug 23, 2010
With the withdrawal of the final American combat brigade from Iraq, US commanders in Afghanistan are hoping to emulate a strategy used there as they step up the war against insurgents.

The number of US and NATO soldiers in Afghanistan is set to peak at 150,000 in coming weeks following orders from US President Barack Obama for an extra 30,000 troops, a "surge" aimed at speeding the end of the war.

Critics say his goal to start drawing down the US presence from mid-2011 is unrealistic, as Afghanistan's security forces are not up to the task of taking charge of the war-torn country.

The 2007 US troop surge in Iraq built on moves the year before to co-opt Sunni tribal militias and turn them against their former Al-Qaeda allies.

Violence peaked, but the United States was soon able to capitalise on the two-pronged approach and turn around the war, which had raged increasingly out of control since the 2003 overthrow of Saddam Hussein.

Now Washington is hoping the war in Afghanistan -- deadlier than ever and already two years older than the Iraq conflict -- can benefit from a similar strategy.

The commander of international forces, US General David Petraeus, who took up his post on July 4, was quick to press for what are now called Local Police Forces -- armed men paid by the government to defend their villages.

The programme is already under way in central Wardak and southern Uruzgan provinces, with plans to extend it to the toughest bastions of insurgency in the south, southwest and east, deputy interior minister Mohammad Munir Mangal has said.

Unlike the Iraqi militias, which were drawn largely along tribal lines, Afghanistan's are localised at village level, officials said.

"It will be up to 10,000 people, in perhaps something like 30 districts all over the country. They will have uniforms, small arms only, radios, but they cannot arrest," said the spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) General Josef Blotz.

"It's like a local neighbourhood watch for defence purposes only. They won't be used as fighting units.

"We need temporary solutions. After two to three years, they can be dissolved or integrated into the police."

Stephen Biddle, an expert on defence policy at Washington think-tank the Council on Foreign Relations, said the village forces plan for Afghanistan had less potential than the Iraqi militias, which were made up of former insurgents.

"In Iraq, the SOI (Sons of Iraq) were mostly insurgents. When these insurgents became SOI, it dramatically reduced the threats," said Biddle, who advised Petraeus in Iraq.

"The village defence force concept in Afghanistan has substantially less potential -- it can be useful as a modest contributor in a limited role, but I don't think it has the potential to transform the security situation.

"The question is how broadly we are going to apply the programme," he said.

Some observers have said it would be better to reinforce the police -- regarded largely as ineffective and corrupt -- and the under-funded military, rather than arm the tribes.

Karzai initially opposed the village militia plan, telling US media when it was first mooted two years ago: "If we create militias again, we will be ruining this country further."

His fears were apparently based on recent history: the communist government of the 1980s funded tribal forces to make up for its own inadequate security structures, but they later morphed into powerful militias that fought each other in a long civil war.

Fighting during that 1992-1994 conflict killed more than 80,000 civilians, according to UN figures.

Nader Nadery, of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, said the plan contradicted a trend towards disarming groups in a country where peace among disparate ethnic and tribal interests is tenuous at the best of times.

"We have tried to disarm groups for many years now, and this means re-arming some people," he said, referring to a UN-backed government programme to persuade myriad armed factions to hand in their weapons.

As the war drags towards its 10th year, US Senator John Kerry said during a recent visit to Kabul that for eight years there was no coherent strategy for Afghanistan.

"This is the first time we've had a strategy. People seem to forget that, that this strategy was only announced last December," he told reporters.

"We have made enormous progress in those six months."



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