When Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani
took office, it ushered in a period of hope for the country's
traumatized people that decades of violence would soon end. But just one
year later, a mood of crisis prevails: British troops are being sent to
help the army maintain control of a strategically important district
and many Afghans believe the Taliban are winning.
The announcement that British soldiers are being dispatched to Helmand
Province came hours after a Taliban suicide bomber killed six U.S.
troops near a major military base in the deadliest single attack on
American troops in the country since 2013.
A British Ministry of Defense statement late Monday said "a small number
of U.K. personnel" were being sent to Helmand in "an advisory role."
The U.K. has 450 troops in Afghanistan as part of NATO's training
mission.
Security has worsened across the country as the Taliban test the mettle
of Afghan security forces following the end of the international combat
mission last year. While they don't typically hold any territory they
win for more than a few hours or days, the Taliban have dealt a massive
blow to the confidence of the over-stretched Afghan forces, who are
fighting the insurgency almost alone for the first time. Officials have
said casualties, as well as attrition and desertion, have taken a toll
on numbers of government forces, while the Taliban strength seems never
to diminish.
Fighting has raged between Taliban and Afghan forces in Helmand's Sangin
district, where an official said the district's army base was the only
area that had not fallen to the Taliban. He spoke on condition of
anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
The spokesman for the Helmand governor, Omar Zwaq, said government
troops were able to deliver supplies to those holed up inside
mid-afternoon Tuesday. But, he added, there was no let-up in the fight
for Sangin.
Taliban spokesman Qari Yousaf said the siege continued "and the government will soon announce their defeat."
Helmand is important to the Taliban. The lush southern province is home
to endless poppy fields and the source of almost all the world's opium,
which helps fund the insurgency. The head of Helmand's provincial
council, Muhammad Kareem Atal, said about 65 percent of Helmand is now
under Taliban control.
There are currently about 13,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan,
including 9,800 Americans, with a mandate to "train, assist and advise"
their Afghan counterparts. That's compared to 140,000 foreign troops at
the peak of combat operations in 2011.
Officials see no traditional winter slowdown in the insurgents' quest to
overthrow the Kabul government, especially in the warmer southern
provinces of Helmand and Kandahar. They expect tough fighting in 2016 as
what the Pentagon last week called an "invigorated Taliban" steps up its fight.
At the same time, Ghani's government appears paralyzed by indecision and
a lack of political intelligence that sees him use public appearances
to deliver lectures but remains incapable of permanently filling vital
security posts such as defense and intelligence, both of which are run
by acting ministers.
This week, a senior official said he was unable to reach Ghani and
resorted to Facebook to warn of the Taliban's encroachment on Sangin.
Hundreds of Afghan security forces have been killed fighting the Taliban
across the province in the past six months, Helmand's deputy governor
Mohammad Jan Rasulyar said.
It wasn't the first time an official used social media to send a message
to the president — former intelligence agency chief Rahmatullah Nabil
used his Facebook page earlier this month to resign.
Political analyst Haroun Mir said such incidents were an indication of
"how remote the political elite have become from the reality on the
ground," obsessed with infighting and intrigue rather than fixing the
country's problems.
The cry for help from Rasulyar finally galvanized the government into action. Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah
called the Helmand situation a "top priority" and commandoes and
special forces were sent to save Sangin from an insurgent takeover.
It also appears to have prompted Britain's Ministry of Defense to
announce the deployment of its own troops to the region to help fight
for Sangin, where Britain lost more than 100 of its 456 fatalities
during its 13-year combat mission in Afghanistan. It was not clear if
U.S. troops were involved in the effort to protect Sangin but a NATO
official said there had been no U.S. airstrikes on Sangin throughout
December.
Mir compared Helmand to Kunduz, the northern Afghan city that the
Taliban took over and held for three days in September, sending
shockwaves across a country that had come to believe the insurgents were
not strong enough to take urban areas.
Now, people are starting to believe the Taliban are indeed stronger than
the government. With insurgents on the outskirts of Helmand's capital
Lashkar Gah, and districts across the province either in Taliban hands
or threatened with takeover, "it's time for the president to recognize
that he is not an academic anymore, he is a war president and he has to
tell the people what he can do. And do something," Mir said.
The Afghan Ministry of Interior confirmed Tuesday that British troops
had arrived at Camp Shorabak, formally the U.S. Marines' Camp
Leatherneck.
Afghan forces "need to strengthen their capacity and improve
coordination," Sediq Sediqqi, the ministry's spokesman told reporters.
He said the main reason for the delay in sending reinforcements to the
area was because of its remoteness and, during the summer months, the
punishing climate.
"Taking on the responsibility for security from NATO and other
international troops was a huge challenge for us," Sediqqi said,
speaking of the Afghan troops who now shoulder full responsibility for
the country's security.
The commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, U.S. Army Gen.
John F. Campbell said recently that the Afghan forces were still
challenged by practical issues such as logistics, as well as lagging
confidence.
"There are some places in Helmand they do think the Taliban are 10 feet
tall, that they are better trained, they got better weapons," Campbell
told The Associated Press in an interview earlier this month. "It is a
confidence thing."
The Taliban claimed responsibility for the Monday suicide attack on U.S.
troops that killed six near Bagram Air Field near Kabul. Two U.S.
troops and an Afghan were also wounded when the bomber drove his
explosives-laden motorcycle into a joint NATO-Afghan patrol.
U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan P. Michael McKinley issued a statement of
condolences Tuesday to the families of the dead "as they face such
heartbreaking news during the holiday season."
Air Force Staff Sgt. Peter Taub, 30, with the Air Force Office of
Special Investigations was killed in the attack, his mother, Arlene
Wagner, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. She said Taub was
stationed at Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota and leaves behind a
pregnant wife and a 3-year-old daughter.
Also killed was New York City police detective Joseph Lemm, a 15-year
veteran of the department, the city's Police Commissioner William
Bratton said.
Monday was the deadliest day for American troops in Afghanistan since
May 2013, when five were killed by a roadside bomb in the country's
south and two killed by an Afghan soldier in an insider attack in the
west. Before Monday's attack, the most recent American casualties in the
country were on Aug. 22, when three contractors were killed in a
suicide attack in Kabul.
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