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US, Afghan Spy Agencies Refuse to Abandon Self-Defeating Warlord Strategy

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US, Afghan Spy Agencies Refuse to Abandon Self-Defeating Warlord Strategy



Michael Hughes
January 1, 2017


Perim Qul

US and Afghan intelligence agencies apparently cannot stop themselves from supporting human rights-abusing strongmen like Perim Qul in their desperate effort to defeat the Taliban despite all evidence indicating the strategy has completely backfired. The insurgency cannot be defeated, however, if the Afghan government continues to alienate the population by backing predatory militias who make the Taliban look like peacekeepers.

On December 26, The Guardian’s Sune Engel Rasmussen reported that the US military and the CIA have turned a “blind eye” to the Afghan National Directorate of Security (NDS) arming strongmen and abusive militias “ostensibly” to fight the Taliban and other enemies of the state. Qul, one of the more notorious militia commanders, has received $85,000 to arm some 500 men, although his activities have gone beyond the defined scope.

“[Qul] allegedly spends part of that money on a private prison where he beats and extorts local people,” Rasmussen writes. “His men have even ambushed and killed a local politician.”


Qul, a 55-year-old war veteran, has been running Rustaq “like a fiefdom” for more than ten years, according to Rasmussen, and has opposed government attempts to assert any authority there despite the fact he allegedly coerces civilians in order to pay his fighters.

An unnamed international coalition official said the US military was “fully aware” of Qul’s activities but ignored them, “perhaps because the regular Afghan forces were stretched so thin they depended on vigilante militias.” The CIA, for its part, refused to comment on the allegations.

They [United States] are not ignoring it out of ignorance,” the official said. “They are ignoring it with intent.”

Qul himself, however, admitted in an interview that his primary enemy was the local governing political party – not the Taliban.

International coalition spokesman Charles Cleveland claimed the United States is not “engaging” Kabul on the warlord’s destructive behavior. In fact, Cleveland said the Pentagon does not see “militia leaders like Qul undermining security.”

Jason Ditz at Anti-War.com pointed out the absurdity of US officials claiming that Afghanistan is a “sovereign nation” and can do whatever they want domestically.

“That the US is occupying Afghanistan and bankrolling the government apparently doesn’t enter into it,” Ditz said in a post on December 26.

In a colossal failure of oversight, Ditz added that the United States apparently does not care that NDS is using funds to empower bad actors who operate above the law.

“Rather, the militia leaders seem free to run roughshod over the locals in this areas, using the NDS funding to gear up and extort even more from the local population, torturing anyone that resists, and killing any political rivals that get in the way,” according to Ditz.


The revelations about Qul come just months after the US Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) issued a scathing report that decried the damage the CIA inflicted upon Afghanistan by supporting unsavory actors in pursuit of short-term military gains after 9/11.

The CIA channeled some $1 billion in money, food and ammunition to maligned actors who engaged in narco-trafficking, arms smuggling, extortion and land-grabbing “which they conducted with impunity,” to defeat the Taliban and al-Qaeda. For years, Ahmed Wali Karzai (AWK), kingpin extraordinaire who held sway in Kandahar, was on the CIA payroll.

“Despite his [AWK’s] suspected involvement in the opium trade, land grabbing, and other illicit activities, he was deemed a vital security partner,” the SIGAR report pointed out. “There was reportedly little appetite within the CIA to hold him accountable, lest doing so jeopardize this critical relationship.”


US actions during this period legitimized warlords with political and financial support at both local and national levels, empowering a new class of strongmen who held their own interests above those of the Afghan state, thereby undermining broader long-term goals.

Washington has obviously failed to learn from any of these insights. In December of 2015, The Washington Post reported that months after the Obama administration declared combat operations over in Afghanistan, the CIA continued to operate a “shadow war” by supporting an Afghan proxy called the Khost Protection Force.

“The highly secretive paramilitary unit has been implicated in civilian killings, torture, questionable detentions, arbitrary arrests and use of excessive force in controversial night raids, abuses that have mostly not been previously disclosed,” the report stated.


Hence, the United States is unlikely to lecture Afghan intelligence for using abusive militias in the name of national security, considering the CIA itself has been accused by the International Criminal Court (ICC) of torturing and mistreating detainees in Afghanistan from 2003 to 2014.

It is obvious that the short-sighted approach has not accomplished the supposed mission of defeating the insurgency or bringing peace to Afghanistan. It appears the CIA has infected NDS with the delusion that lawless proxy fighters are an evil necessity.

The reality is this entire warlord strategy has served to only prolong the war, alienate the Afghan people while undermining the legitimacy of the Afghan state. In short, it amounts to the precise recipe for how not to counter an insurgency.

http://www.aopnews.com/opinion/us-a...e-to-abandon-self-defeating-warlord-strategy/
 
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The mechanism of anarchy has been inserted into NDS which makes the Jester of Kabul to become irrelevant, where warmongering war lords are becoming stronger not excluding taliban either! what a strategy, what a way to show the world "This is what winning looks like" :disagree:
 
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The US wants war. The Afghan regime wants war. Both profit from it. Obviously they will back WAR LORDS, Warlords need war to exist. War is now an economy of Afghanistan along with drug smuggling.
I agree. US never wants peace lasting peace in Afghanistan as long as they prevent attacks on American soil. Their interests are as narrow and hollow as their claim to guarantee world peace. They do not care what the warlords do. They do care that they do not fight the Americans and at times the Taliban, this is enough for them. Americans are tyrants by nature. They do not even care about Afghan deaths in airstrikes treating them as disposable assets.

Sta kor charta da? Are you from eastern South Waziristan, Bannu or Tank? Your tribe is active in fighting the Taliban (TTP)... I am sure being from a region constantly affected by the war you would have many stories. Do share marra. And its good to have a pashtun brother on this site.
 
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Sta kor charta da? Are you from eastern South Waziristan, Bannu or Tank? Your tribe is active in fighting the Taliban (TTP)... I am sure being from a region constantly affected by the war you would have many stories. Do share marra. And its good to have a pashtun brother on this site.

From Mullazai-Tank (dikhan) actually. My father's cousins fought along (Not for) Turkestan against TTP when TTP attacked a govt building being used by Turkestan as a staging point. TTP never came to mullazai again. My mother side is Marwat, The kidnapped my Uncle, Nadir Kham Marwat, then a wapda excien (i have no idea how to spell it :D), they let him go after getting surrounded by a chuga (search party) by villagers.
(edit) almost forgot, they once tried to blow up my Grand father's Qabar using IED (Col Sarfraz marwat, veteran of ww2. Kashmir & 65)
These are my personal stories about TTP
 
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The US wants war. The Afghan regime wants war. Both profit from it. Obviously they will back WAR LORDS, Warlords need war to exist. War is now an economy of Afghanistan along with drug smuggling.

That's what is called war industry.
US has poured trillions of $ in Afghanistan.
Where India was the biggest profitier out of those reconstruction contracts.
Pakistani contractors were kept away using TTP card.
 
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I agree. US never wants peace lasting peace in Afghanistan as long as they prevent attacks on American soil. Their interests are as narrow and hollow as their claim to guarantee world peace. They do not care what the warlords do. They do care that they do not fight the Americans and at times the Taliban, this is enough for them. Americans are tyrants by nature. They do not even care about Afghan deaths in airstrikes treating them as disposable assets.

Sta kor charta da? Are you from eastern South Waziristan, Bannu or Tank? Your tribe is active in fighting the Taliban (TTP)... I am sure being from a region constantly affected by the war you would have many stories. Do share marra. And its good to have a pashtun brother on this site.

There are many Pukhtoons on this site, including me, granted my Pukhtu isn't great but zama kor Karachi da
 
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What is happening in Afghanistan is a page out of CIA's Latin America playbook. No one should be surprised.

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The US wants war. The Afghan regime wants war. Both profit from it. Obviously they will back WAR LORDS, Warlords need war to exist. War is now an economy of Afghanistan along with drug smuggling.

There are those who say the CIA runs drugs for covert ops.

Per the much esteemed New York Times:



The CIA Drug Connection Is as Old as the Agency
By Larry Collins
Published: December 3, 1993
LONDON—
Recent news item: The Justice Department is investigating allegations that officers of a special Venezuelan anti-drug unit funded by the CIA smuggled more than 2,000 pounds of cocaine into the United States with the knowledge of CIA officials - despite protests by the Drug Enforcement Administration, the organization responsible for enforcing U.S. drug laws.

That is a huge amount of cocaine. But it was hardly a first for the CIA. The agency has never been above using individuals or organizations with known links to drug trafficking if it thought they could help it further its national security mission.

Let us put the Venezuelan case in context: To protect its "assets" abroad, the CIA has ensured that the DEA's concerns outside the country were subordinated to its own. Until recently, no DEA country attaché overseas was allowed to initiate an investigation into a suspected drug trafficker or attempt to recruit an informant without clearance from the local CIA station chief. DEA country attachés are required to employ the standard State Department cipher, and all their transmissions are made available to the CIA station chief. The CIA also has access to all DEA investigative reports, and informants' and targets' identities when DEA activities outside the United States were involved.

And, an in-depth reporting by Gary Webb who was harassed after reporting the CIA role, until he committed suicide.

The Contras, Cocaine, and Covert Operations
National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 2
For more information contact:
202/994-7000 or nsarchiv@gwu.edu

Washington, D.C. – An August, 1996, series in the San Jose Mercury News by reporter Gary Webb linked the origins of crack cocaine in California to the contras, a guerrilla force backed by the Reagan administration that attacked Nicaragua's Sandinista government during the 1980s. Webb's series, "The Dark Alliance," has been the subject of intense media debate, and has focused attention on a foreign policy drug scandal that leaves many questions unanswered.

This electronic briefing book is compiled from declassified documents obtained by the National Security Archive, including the notebooks kept by NSC aide and Iran-contra figure Oliver North, electronic mail messages written by high-ranking Reagan administration officials, memos detailing the contra war effort, and FBI and DEA reports. The documents demonstrate official knowledge of drug operations, and collaboration with and protection of known drug traffickers. Court and hearing transcripts are also included.
 
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Eternally destabilised Afghanistan is in US interests, a strong Afghani central gov is not. They will give cent gov a semblance of authority just to save face in the world. It is post Russia Afghan jihad all over again.
 
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The fight for control of Afghanistan is for control of the Opium/Heroin trade, which has boomed since the Taliban have been ousted. There is no anti-terrorist agenda, it is always about the $$$
 
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Honestly, what should U.S. do about it?
 
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Honestly, what should U.S. do about it?
nothing different, they are doing fine.. and doing just the same any other superpower would do if in the same position.
Don't hate the player, hate the game :triniti:
 
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Intention behind Afghanistan invasion was never to bring peace to the country, Instead it is the controlled chaos they (CIA) wanted in the region and got that through Northern Alliance/NDS, TTP, BLA and other militias many of whom are forming into the Afghan Daesh.

Afghan Taliban were a stabilising force in that country where border nations were not treated as enemies nor invaded.

With us exit inevitable, all these CIA sponsored militias will become Afghan Daesh. China, Pakistan and Russia understand that, hence the support for Afghan Taliban on the table.
 
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