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TIME: An Afghanistan Exit Strategy: Buying Off the Taliban? (You can't make this stuff up.)

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laststeamtrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-14-09 03:19 PM
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TIME: An Afghanistan Exit Strategy: Buying Off the Taliban? (You can't make this stuff up.)

An Afghanistan Exit Strategy: Buying Off the Taliban?
By Mark Thompson/Washington Friday, Aug. 14, 2009



By measure both of blood and of treasure, the war in Afghanistan is a costly business. To date, 782 U.S. troops have been killed there, and the conflict is costing Washington $4 billion a month. Is that a good investment? Some suggest it may be a lot more cost-effective to simply pay those currently earning their keep as gunmen for the Taliban to stay out of the fight.

<snip>

Uncertainties are unavoidable in war, of course. One of them is the exact number of bad guys in Afghanistan, many of whom are paid to fight, and just how much their paymasters are spending on them. But a new report from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee this week says that U.S. commanders commonly refer to the "$10 Taliban" — alluding to the amount insurgents earn each day from Taliban coffers swelled by drug proceeds and Islamist benefactors. That's more than an Afghan cop makes. "They can collect double or triple pay for planting an improvised explosive device," the report adds. And how many fighters are on the Taliban payroll? Earlier this year, Mohammad Hanif Atmar, Afghanistan's interior minister, estimated during a visit to Washington that there are between 10,000 and 15,000 Taliban fighting his government and its U.S. allies.

That makes a quick cost-benefit analysis possible. While plainly some Taliban are an ideologically committed hard core that won't lay down their guns, a lot — perhaps most — would presumably stop attacking U.S. and allied forces if they could earn more from it than they currently do for fighting. Vice President Joe Biden has estimated that only 5% of those fighting for the Taliban are "incorrigible, not susceptible to anything other than being defeated," while 70% are only in it for the money. The remaining 25%, he said, fall in between. So, if the U.S. opted to pay all Taliban fighters $20 a day — double what they get now — to stop fighting, that would amount to a $300,000 daily bill, or one-fifth of 1% of the war's current cost to the U.S. taxpayer of $133 million a day. The monthly cost of buying off the Taliban rank and file would be $9 million, less than the price of a single AH-64 Apache helicopter.

"The U.S. could put all the Taliban fighters on its payroll at twice the daily rate , withdraw all forces except those needed to guard the paymasters, and buy the insurgency at less cost than maintaining forces, Burger King, Popeye's, defense contractors and Nautilus equipment in Bagram," the key U.S. military base in Afghanistan, writes John McCreary, a former senior Pentagon intelligence analyst. "If the Taliban can buy fighters" he writes in his daily intel blog NightWatch, "the U.S. should be able to outbid the Taliban for the same men."

It's not as far-fetched as it sounds. As McCreary explains, the U.S. military did something very similar in Iraq, paying as many as 100,000 Sunni insurgents $300 a month to stop fighting. That worked out to about $1 million a day — the price of a single Mine-Resistant, Ambush-Protected vehicle. The U.S. has now shipped more than 10,000 MRAPs to Iraq and Afghanistan, making clear just how much of a bargain the U.S. got when it bought off much of Iraq's insurgency.

<more>

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1916521,00.html
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doc03 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-14-09 03:43 PM
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1. Exactly paying off the enemy had more
to do with stabilizing Iraq then any surge ever did. After Saddam Husein was defeated in 2003 we could have just bought everyone off, saved a lot of money and lives on both sides.
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seabeckind Donating Member (406 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-14-09 03:57 PM
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2. Only one way out
The same one every other empire has used to get out. Get the map you used to get in and go the other way.

Giving money to people who only buy guns, poppy seeds, and goats is stupid. Giving it to a person in the US means something because that is what we are. We go to a mall. They got no malls and don't want one.

I saw this in a movie once: The Gods Must Be Crazy. Recommend it to anyone. The Beast of War was pretty good also.
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-14-09 03:58 PM
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3. We could of hired the whole country for what we spent on killing. nt
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