AFGHANISTAN - Dec 24 - Afghans And US Plan To Recruit Local Militias.
Taking a page from the successful experiment in Iraq, American
commanders and Afghan leaders are preparing to arm local militias to
help in the fight against a resurgent Taliban. B t along with hope, the
move is raising fears here that the new armed groups could push the
country into a deeper bloodletting. The militias will be deployed to
help American and Afghan security forces, which are stretched far and
wide across this mountainous country. The first of the local defense
forces are scheduled to begin operating early next year in Wardak
Province, an area just outside the capital where the Taliban have
overrun most government authority. If the experiment proves successful,
similar militias will be set up rapidly across the country, senior
American and Afghan officials said. The formation of Afghan militias
comes on the heels of a similar undertaking in Iraq, where 100,000 Sunni
gunmen, many of them former insurgents, have been placed on the
government payroll. The wakening Councils, as they are known, are
credited by American officials as one of the main catalysts behind the
steep reduction in violence there. But the plan is causing deep unease
among many Afghans, who fear that Pashtun-dominated militias could get
out of control, terrorize local populations and turn against the
government. The Afghan government, aided by the Americans, has carried
out several ambitious campaigns since 2001 to disarm militants and
gather up their guns. A proposal to field local militias was defeated in
the Afghan Senate in the fall. "There will be fighting between
Pashtuns and non-Pashtuns", said Salih Muhammad Registani, a member
of the Afghan Parliament and an ethnic Tajik. Registani raised the
specter of the Arbaki, a Pashtun-dominated militia turned loose on other
Afghans early in the 20th century. "A civil war will start very
soon", he said. The plan, approved this month by President Hamid
Karzai, is being pushed forward anyway, to help stem the deteriorating
security situation here. The proposal to field what amounts to lightly
trained gunmen reflects the sense of urgency surrounding the fight
against the Taliban, who were removed from power after the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, but who have staged a remarkable resurgence
in recent years. American commanders say that while they would prefer to
field Afghan Army and police forces, they are simply not available.
"We don't have enough police", said Major General Michael
Tucker, the deputy commander of American forces in the country. "We
don't have time to get the police ready". One survey, by the
International Council on Security and Development, found that the
Taliban had established a permanent presence in 72% of Afghanistan, up
from 54% a year ago. In recent months, the Taliban have moved into the
provinces around Kabul, including Wardak to its west. In addition to
setting up the first local Afghan militias there, American commanders
are sending several hundred American soldiers to the province, the first
of which have already arrived. Wardak Province is bisected by the
country's national highway, which has been the scene of numerous
ambushes of supply convoys by Taliban insurgents. The plan for the
militias coincides with the arrival of General David Petraeus, who
presided over the reduction in violence in Iraq and who has since become
overall commander for American forces in Afghanistan and the rest of the
region. The Americans are sending 20,000 to 30,000 additional troops
over the next year, in addition to the nearly 70,000 American and NATO
troops who are already here. President-elect Barack Obama has declared
that he will redouble America's efforts to win. The formation of
the militias represents at least a partial answer to the question of how
American commanders intend to wrest back the initiative from the Taliban
over the next 12 months. While some elected officials in the US have
suggested that the Americans and Afghans might try to exploit fissures
in the Taliban, possibly breaking off some groups that can be
reconciled, the plan for the militias coupled with the influx of fresh
American forces suggests that American commanders intend to squeeze the
Taliban first. American and Afghan officials say they intend to set up
local militias of 100 to 200 fighters in each provincial district, with
the fighters being drawn from the villages where they live. (Wardak has
eight districts.) To help ensure the dependability of each fighter, the
Americans and Afghans are planning to rely on local leaders, like tribal
chiefs and clerics, to choose the militiamen for them. Those militiamen
will be gi en a brief period of training, along with weapons like
assault rifles and grenade launchers, and communication gear, said Abdul
Rahim Wardak, the Afghan defense minister. In Iraq, American commanders
relied almost exclusively on tribal leaders to put Sunni gunmen at their
disposal. But in Afghanistan, 30 years of war have left the tribes
scattered and attenuated. American and Afghan leaders say they are
instead trying to cobble together councils made up of a wider range of
leaders. American and Afghan officials say they are confident that they
can keep the militias under control, and they said they hoped the
militias could carry out a range of duties, like providing intelligence
on Taliban movements that American and Afghan forces could act on. We
don't know when bad people move into town", Tucker said.
"But the local people know. They know everything". One tribal
leader from Wardak Province said that while the Taliban were deeply
unpopular in his province, people were worried that local militias could
make the situation worse. In an interview, Mohammed Naim Haqmal, a
leader of the Nuri tribe, said the Taliban controlled about 80% of
Wardak Province ? essentially everything except the centers of each
district. At night, Haqmal said, the Taliban range freely, setting up
checkpoints and laying bombs for American convoys traveling on the
highway from Kabul to Kandahar. But for all that, Haqmal said, the
Taliban were unpopular in Wardak, mainly because their constant attacks
prevented people from leading normal lives. Two months ago, Haqmal said,
a group of locals in a village called Jajatoo rioted when the Taliban
blocked a local road in order to stage an attack on some American
forces. Taliban fighters opened fire on the villagers, killing five.
"The Taliban want to fight, and that causes problems for the
people", Haqmal said. "People just want to live their
lives". Still, Haqmal said he was skeptical that the
government-backed militias could succeed because the Afghan and American
officials were bypassing the traditional leaders of the province. So
far, he said, they had selected leaders in the community who lacked
credibility with the local people. Moreover, Haqmal said he was worried
that the militias would fail to receive proper support and guidance from
the government, and end up starting tribal feuds with members of the
Taliban. "We already have the Afghan Army and police they should
stick with them", Haqmal said. A Taliban commander based in Wardak
Province, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear that he would
become a target, predicted that the government militias would find it
hard to put down roots in the area, if only because the Taliban had
already done so. "We are living in the districts, in the villages
we are not living in the mountains", the Taliban chief said.
"The people are with us".
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