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The Impossible Dream In Afghanistan

October 7, 2009: Showing the Afghan security forces how to better handle basic skills like patrolling and combat tactics is being wasted because of corruption and incompetence among the military leadership. The Afghans have some of the same problems as the Iraqis, namely tribalism and a weak sense of nationalism. With four major ethnic groups (Pushtun, Tajik, Uzbek and Hazara), and dozens of powerful tribal organizations, it’s been difficult to get Afghan recruits who are willing to serve in the national interest. Ethnic and tribal loyalties are always stronger.

But European colonizers proved in the 19th century that, with good training and good NCOs and officers, you can produce combat and police units from tribal warriors that can match Western ones in effectiveness. The key problem is getting effective NCOs and officers. It’s the sergeants that supervise the troops, and keep order in the barracks, and the officers who insure that everyone is getting effective orders. Professional officers and NCOs have long been the secret to success in Western armies. But in Afghanistan, the scarcity of education, or even literacy (less than a third of the population can read), has made it difficult to find men capable of being trained for leadership positions. And many of those who are, on paper, qualified, are too prone to corruption (stealing and taking bribes.) It's not that there are not any Afghans capable of being capable and honest officers and NCOs, it's just that there aren't enough of them to run a force 80,000 police, or an army of over 100,000. 

In fact, Afghanistan has never had nothing even remotely resembling a capable, structured, loyal army. Worse, the legacy of corruption and inefficiency in the army is far worse than in Iraq. During the 1980s, when the Soviets occupied Afghanistan, there was a standing Afghan government army, but it was rampant with corruption, incompetence, desertions, and thousands of conscripts and officers who were either sympathetic to, or active members of, the anti-Communist guerrillas. The Soviets, justifiably so, regarded the Afghan forces as worthless in combat, forcing Russians to do almost all of the heavy fighting themselves. In the 1990s, civil war prevented the formation of anything like a national army, since there was no national government. All of this has been going on continuously for almost 30 years. Throw in the ever-present heroin trade, and you have a major challenge creating a professional ground force, to say nothing of a national police force.

To a certain degree, none of these problems, like corruption and incompetence, are new to the Middle East or Central Asia. The difference between places like Egypt and Afghanistan is that, despite corruption and favoritism, sometimes rampant, the Egyptian military is able to defend the country and operate as a respectable, capable force that can fight. Men obey their orders and, most of the time, know how to do their jobs. Unfortunately, in places like Afghanistan, these problems are so pervasive that in the past they have traditionally paralyzed the ability of the military to fight and win any kind of battle.   

One of the major obstacles NATO is trying to overcome is helping the Afghans create NCOs and junior officers. But this takes years, and there's no way to fast-track it. Well, actually there is, but that involves an old technique that is no longer politically correct. That involves assigning NATO officers and NCOs to Afghan units (along with translators) to run things until reliable Afghan NCOs and officers can be found and trained. That takes years.

Meanwhile NCOs must be slowly developed, by selecting recruits who have leadership and management skills, and training them, on the job, over several years. It takes 3-5 years to get a suitable recruit to the point where he can handle the job of the lowest level sergeant (in charge of 10-12 troops or policemen.) Another 3-5 years gets you an NCO that can handle a platoon (3-4 squads, which is usually led by a lieutenant, who depends on the platoon sergeant a lot.) Another five years gets you a company 1st sergeant. This NCO assists the officer commanding the company, and supervises the other twenty or so NCOs in the company. While developing these NCOs, you select the best of them to train as officers. It takes a few months of training, and a few years of service, to get a reliable lieutenant. It takes a year or two, if these guys are constantly in action, before promotion to each additional rank (captain, major, lieutenant colonel.)

This applies to soldiers as well as police. That's because the Afghan police mostly operate in rural areas, where they function as a paramilitary force, They sometimes have to deal with large groups of several dozen armed tribesmen. If negotiation fails, the police are frequently forced to fight battles. The American advisory teams are there to show, by example, how experienced NCOs operate, and how trained troops are more effective when supervised by a good NCO and led by reliable officers.

Western nations have, in major wars, had to develop NCOs a lot more quickly. This was the case in the two World Wars, and as recently as the Vietnam war. When you are conscripting a lot of troops and creating many new units, the number of experienced soldiers is spread pretty thin. So you get “shake and bake” NCOs. These are young men (and some women) who have the leadership and management skills who are first selected (using tests and their performance in basic training), and then given some training on what NCOs do and how they do it. During World War II, there were many platoon and 1st sergeants in their 20s who did quite well, after on 2-3 years in service. The advantage you had in this situation was lots of live examples of effective NCOs for the new guys to emulate. But here you were drawing people from an educated population, and didn't have to worry about tribal loyalties or corruption.

On the plus side, in Afghanistan, you had a lot of men who have been fighting for over two decades. Lots of good NCO material. But the concept of the Western NCO (a professional supervisor who is respected and well paid) is largely unknown in Afghanistan. The old Afghan army was based largely on the Soviet model, which treated most NCOs as “senior privates” and left most of the supervisory duties to officers. Most of the Afghan men with combat experience, however, were not in the army, but in tribal war parties (usually squad or platoon size). Here, many of them they gained good NCO type experience at the squad and platoon sergeant level. These men have been found and given some training for squad and platoon sergeant positions. Those that are at the platoon sergeant level, and are also literate, are being used as 1st sergeants (who have to handle some paperwork).

Another advantage the Afghans have over the Iraqis is a warrior mentality. It’s easier to make the Afghans understand that for an army to work, troops must learn how to use their weapons (and take good care of them), and stand and fight. While Iraq has produced some good soldiers, most Iraqis want nothing to do with fighting. However, with good training and NCOs, just about anyone can be turned into an effective soldier. But you need competent NCOs to create more competent NCOs. The police have a lot of inexperienced leadership. These men are more prone to corruption, as well as incompetence. The experienced paratrooper teams are going to find out how much they can change that in a year, especially for the police, but also for the army.

American and NATO commanders have come to accept that most of the Afghan police and soldiers they have recruited and trained are useless (especially the police) because of the illiteracy, tribalism and corruption. The new goal is to turn out fewer, but higher quality troops and police. This is more of a problem with the police, who have a much more complex job than the army. The police must deal with civilians, and tribal leaders, at lot. This often involves legal disputes, and the Afghan judicial system is not in very good shape either. Just getting the cops to be less corrupt and exploitative, would be a big step forward. But the concept of an "honest cop" is somewhat alien to most Afghans, as is the concept of police in general.

Another problem is cost. The current army costs about $8 billion a year, which is entirely paid for by NATO countries. That's because the Afghan GDP is less than $15 billion a year. Afghanistan is the poorest country in Eurasia, it is only rich in weapons and violence. And heroin. Afghanistan is the world's largest producer of heroin, which is the largest business in the country. But the main purpose of foreign aid in Afghanistan is to build a larger economy. That's not going to happen as long as the drug gangs, and their Taliban allies, are in business. While building a stronger economy will make the country less violent, the drug gangs and the Taliban are against economic growth. This sort of thing is the major reason why the situation in Afghanistan is described as "difficult and complex." It sure is.

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SOP919F3    When will we learn?   10/7/2009 2:38:05 PM
You try to educate these people and what do they do?  They eat the books! 
This really isn't a country - if it were there would be some kind of cohesion to unite these tribes.  So why continue attempting to form a country so large with tribes who want to remain separate?  Divide up what was to be Afghanistan into what it wants (tribes).  Some eligible names for the new countries: Pushtunistan, Hazarastan, Newarkistan, Chikagoistan and Mexikanistan.  Once divided, we ally with those most capable and willing concentrating our resources to create a powerful presence.  The regions that aren't willing to work with us will attract the Islamo-nuts (bringing them out of the wood work) who will eventually be bold enough to do what they have been doing for over 1300 years - wage war and make local people's lives miserable.  When they move out in large numbers, the BUFFs can spank them back from 30,000 ft. THEN troops can sweep up the mess.
 
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BB45    Double Down or Leave?   10/7/2009 5:19:56 PM

Yeah, SOP919..   I agree.  I hear that the administration is waffling over whether to double down in Afghanistan or getting out.  Articles like this make me think we should get out.  There is some book out now that explains how we could have won in Vietnam.  I havent read it yet, but unless it deals with the culture problem in Afghanistan (tribal, not national thinking) I can't believe it will help.  Frankly the only thing that is preventing me from saying we should get out now is that I am unclear what that would result in.  Might withdrawal be worse than staying in a while longer?  Very difficult, this thing.

 
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stoker       10/7/2009 6:42:18 PM
The concept of dividing Afghanistan in to tribal units is interesting, the old divide and conquer trick.
The main problem I see is the total lack of infrastructure within these 'tribal areas' to provide an economy capable of supporting their specific populations.
Somehow, someone is going to have to put in place, an education system that is going to be able to solve the massive illiteracy problem currently in Afghanistan.  This must include the female population.
Afghanistan, or whatever it final form takes has no hope of becoming a self governing unit unless they have literate governence.
Thats one of the major problems in Afghanistan, the Islamic imam nutters run the show because the Afghans can't read or write and have no means of accessing alternative information. Basically its a form of tribal slavery, which has to be broken, but this will be nearly impossible because  the tribal clans have survived for 100's of years and we aren't going to be able to change this for decades.
The other big problem is the heroin trade, this provides a lot of the funds supporting criminal and taliban type insurgents, actually breaking Afghanistan in to tribal areas MAY make this easier. Smashing the heroin production in Afghanistan would be of immense value to  all the countries through out the world with drug problems. This alone is one of the reasons we can't 'cut & run'.
The main reason we cannot leave Afghanistan until we secure some sort of democratic Afghan Government is problem of Pakistan ( and its nuclear weapons) falling under the control of a anti-West Islamic fundamentalist theocracy. At present these fundamentalists are under attack from both the NATO forces in Afghanistan and the Pakistan forces in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. If the US & NATO were to cut and run in Afghanistan, Pakistan would be in deep trouble.
So it looks like we are going to have to soldier on, hopefully Obama will be sensible enough to listen to his Generals and we will get a surge of extra troops. It worked in Irak and it will work in Afghanistan.
 
 
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PPR    The Problem   10/8/2009 12:43:06 AM
The big problem is developing a self-sustaining government.  Afghanistan is so poor that it can't support a large army without outside help.  This leaves the US in the position of either doing the heavy lifting or pouring money (most of which will be stolen) into Afghanistan and hoping we can build up their military enough to do the job.  Certainly there is potential for developing an economy in Afghanistan.  It has mineral wealth and natual gas resources.  But these resources can't be exploited as long as stability can't be maintained.
 
The Bush administration seemed to have a strategy of holding the country with a relatively small number of troops while building the infrastructure over the long term.  At Bush-plan levels, the US could have sustained its presence in Afghanistan indefinitely. BO seems to be planning the opposite: a large presence for a relatively short period of time.  While this should generate more stability in the near future, it will have to be sustained for at least a generation to work.
 
We've had troops there for 8 years now.  Can we manage 20?
 
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kerravon       10/8/2009 4:40:25 PM

Yeah, SOP919..   I agree.  I hear that the administration is waffling over whether to double down in Afghanistan or getting out.  Articles like this make me think we should get out.  There is some book out now that explains how we could have won in Vietnam.  I havent read it yet, but unless it deals with the culture problem in Afghanistan (tribal, not national thinking) I can't believe it will help.  Frankly the only thing that is preventing me from saying we should get out now is that I am unclear what that would result in.  Might withdrawal be worse than staying in a while longer?  Very difficult, this thing.




Vietnam was deliberately lost by US civilians refusing to provide either money or air support to the South, to match Soviet funding of the North.  Unless the book talks about giving brain transplants to US Democrats, not sure what else there is to discuss.
 
As for Afghanistan.  All these cultural problems should affect the enemy too.  Whereas our side has air support and tanks and numbers.  What's the actual problem?  Is the ANA losing battles?  Or is the ANA not up to Western standards?  Who is going around saying that the latter is some huge problem that means we need to throw in the towel and hand Afghanistan over to terrorists because Afghanistan turned out to be slightly different from Switzerland?
 
Seems to me that the same way an army is expected to work with the equipment it has, rather than what it would like to have, we also need to work with Afghans as they are.  If the Northern Alliance was able to defeat the Taliban when the numbers were against it, I'm pretty sure they'll be able to continue to do so into the future now that the numbers are on their side. Anything more than that should be considered a bonus.  Also note that the NA did that with a couple of hundred US special forces.  If you can find 200 Afghans to take their place, you end up with a force known to be able to defeat a much larger enemy, and now with numbers on its side.  And the US can sustain that for as long as it has bases to fly from.
 
And if you truly can't find 200 competent Afghans, then work around that problem too.  What can we wring out of the 500 most competent Afghans?  They only need to defeat other Afghans, not invade Mongolia against Russian and Chinese opposition.  The Afghans probably don't care about having 200 US soldiers on their territory indefinitely anyway, if it comes to that (ie if they are needed).  Last time I saw an Afghan poll there was something like 85% support for the US military presence.  That's more than you'll get on some US campuses.
 
As Donald Rusmfeld said - "Henny Penny, the sky is falling".
 
 
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