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  1. #1
    Council Member tequila's Avatar
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    Death rate for Afghan police force 'staggering' - Ottawa Star, 1 Oct.

    KANDAHAR–In rural Panjwaii and Zhari districts, Afghan cops are being killed faster than they can be replaced, says one of their Canadian mentors.

    That terrifying fact stands as a huge roadblock to Canada's efforts to turn over security in these troubled regions to the fledgling police force.
    "The rate at which they're losing policemen can never be replenished, unfortunately," RCMP Cpl. Barry Pitcher said.

    In Panjwaii district alone – an insurgent hotbed west of Kandahar – police officers recently had six trucks destroyed in a 20-day period through roadside bombs and ambushes.

    In July, 71 police officers were killed in regional command south, a territory that includes Kandahar province. Nationwide, 650 officers were killed from March 2006 to March 2007. Government officials say another 500 have been killed since then ...

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    Canadians pay to bolster Afghan security, Globe and Mail, 9 October 2007.

    KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Canada has decided to sidestep the corrupt Afghan government and ensure the safety of Canadian soldiers by paying Afghan police directly, in cash.

    It's an attempt to buy stability in the dangerous districts west of Kandahar city, where Canadian soldiers stake their lives on the reliability of their Afghan allies.

    “This is brand new,” said Brigadier-General Guy Laroche, Canada's top commander in Afghanistan, during an interview Monday. “We're going to make sure our people eat.”
    Good idea, although it is a sad commentary on capacity and corruption problems in the Ministry of Interior:

    “The money did not get to these guys,” Gen. Laroche said. “Somebody is taking 10 per cent here, 10 per cent there, and at the end the poor guy is left with nothing. Would you stay in a place like that without being paid? I mean, c'mon.”
    US police mentors are doing the same.

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    Eurasia Insight, 20 Nov 07: Afghanistan: A Law Enforcement Success Story in Kabul
    ..."Corruption is rooted in economics, and so is violence. Give me the equipment, the men and the money and I can turn this force into one that can clean the crime off these streets in a matter of months. Until then, I do my best with what I have.".....

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    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jedburgh View Post

    Great article Jed, thanks for posting.

  5. #5
    Council Member tequila's Avatar
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    Afghan Police Struggle to Work a Beat in a War - NYTIMES, 13 January.

    Many of the problems frustrating Afghanistan’s efforts to secure its dangerous eastern and southern provinces were evident in the bizarre tour of duty of Shair Mohammad, a police officer who spent 18 months in an isolated swath of steppe.

    Until December, when a colonel arrived to replace him, Mr. Mohammad, 30, had been the acting police chief in the Nawa district of Ghazni Province. The job gave him jurisdiction over hundreds of square miles near Pakistan that the Taliban had used as a sanctuary since being ousted from power in 2001.

    But his ability to police his beat was severely compromised.

    Mr. Mohammad had no rank, no money for food and not enough clothing or gear to operate in cold weather. Two of his six trucks were broken. The ammunition the Pentagon provided him came in cardboard boxes that immediately crumbled, exposing cartridges to the elements on his storeroom’s dirty floor.

    Compounding his woes, the possibility of mutiny was on his mind. It was a natural worry, he said, because since April none of his men had been paid.
    “My commanders always just give me promises,” he said. “They never send the money ...”

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    18 Jun 08 testimony before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform's Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs regarding Oversight of U.S. Efforts to Train and Equip Police and Enhance the Justice Sector in Afghanistan:

    U.S. Efforts to Develop Capable Afghan Police Forces Face Challenges and Need a Coordinated, Detailed Plan to Help Ensure Accountability, Charles Michael Johnson, Jr., Director, International Affairs and Trade, GAO

    Rule of Law Programs in Afghanistan, Frank Ward, Deputy Assistant Inspector General for Inspections, DoS

    Oversight of U.S. Efforts to Train and Equip Police and Enhance the Justice Sector in Afghanistan, David Johnson, Asst Secretary, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, DoS

    Oversight of U.S. Efforts to Train and Equip Police and Enhance the Justice System in Afghanistan, Bobby Wilkes, Dpty Asst Secretary of Defense for South Asia, OSD

    Oversight of U.S. Efforts to Train and Equip Police and Enhance the Justice System in Afghanistan, Mark Ward, Senior Deputy Assistant Administrator, Asia Bureau, USAID

    Oversight of U.S. Efforts to Train and Equip Police and Enhance the Justice System in Afghanistan, Bruce Swartz, Dpty Asst Attorney General, Criminal Division, DoJ

  7. #7
    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default Lemme see if I have this right.

    GAO -- who would not have a job if they found nothing wrong -- found things wrong. Okay.

    Three DoS, One DoD, one USAID and One DOJ type all commented on the wrongs GAO found -- and added couple to show they were concerned. Okay.

    A part of the reported problem is failure to adequately equip the ANP. No mention is made of the part played by our ridiculous procurement laws and regulations -- most at the behest of the Congress that is conducting this 'hearing' -- which are almost certainly primarily responsible for that flaw. Okay.

    Another part is that the Afghans works on a different timetable and have different mores than we would like. Okay.

    Could the excessive bureaucracy herein displayed also play a part in the failure of the ANP to walk on water?

    Oh, wait; not too much water there...

    We can save money if we store this and release it again a year from now; save the cost of another hearing to discover little real change. Or we could say no such hearing until 2012 and give things a chance to get fixed...

    Not to disparage your posting Jedburgh, I appreciate it and your postings. It's just every now and then, my mind really boggles at how utterly ridiculous and overweight we've become. Verily, I have vented...

  8. #8
    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Default The price of working with the ANP

    The BBC News reports:
    Five British soldiers have been shot dead in Helmand Province, in an attack the UK military blamed on a "rogue" Afghan policeman.
    And a comment from an ex-UK commander:
    It will undermine trust, certainly in the short term, until we establish exactly what happened. And it wouldn't at all surprise me now if there aren't a lot of soldiers, British soldiers in Afghanistan, with their fingers very firmly on the trigger when they're around Afghan police and military.
    See:http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8341659.stm and http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8341825.stm

    Not good news for Afghanisation and training the Afghans.

    davidbfpo

  9. #9
    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Default ANP police officer kills five UK soldier

    A few more details in follow-up reporting, notably the attack was within a compound: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...-strategy.html

    Commentary and links on:http://defenceoftherealm.blogspot.co...11/murder.html

    davidbfpo

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