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Newsweek: Six billion dollars later, the Afghan National Police can't begin to do their jobs

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laststeamtrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-10 05:27 PM
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Newsweek: Six billion dollars later, the Afghan National Police can't begin to do their jobs
The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight
Six billion dollars later, the Afghan National Police can't begin to do their jobs right—never mind relieve American forces.

By T. Christian Miller, Mark Hosenball, and Ron Moreau | NEWSWEEK

Published Mar 19, 2010

Mohammad Moqim watches in despair as his men struggle with their AK-47 automatic rifles, doing their best to hit man-size targets 50 meters away. A few of the police trainees lying prone in the mud are decent shots, but the rest shoot clumsily, and fumble as they try to reload their weapons. The Afghan National Police (ANP) captain sighs as he dismisses one group of trainees and orders 25 more to take their places on the firing line. "We are still at zero," says Captain Moqim, 35, an eight-year veteran of the force. "They don't listen, are undisciplined, and will never be real policemen."

Poor marksmanship is the least of it. Worse, crooked Afghan cops supply much of the ammunition used by the Taliban, according to Saleh Mohammed, an insurgent commander in Helmand province. The bullets and rocket-propelled grenades sold by the cops are cheaper and of better quality than the ammo at local markets, he says. It's easy for local cops to concoct credible excuses for using so much ammunition, especially because their supervisors try to avoid areas where the Taliban are active. Mohammed says local police sometimes even stage fake firefights so that if higher-ups question their outsize orders for ammo, villagers will say they've heard fighting.

America has spent more than $6 billion since 2002 in an effort to create an effective Afghan police force, buying weapons, building police academies, and hiring defense contractors to train the recruits—but the program has been a disaster. More than $322 million worth of invoices for police training were approved even though the funds were poorly accounted for, according to a government audit, and fewer than 12 percent of the country's police units are capable of operating on their own. Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, the State Department's top representative in the region, has publicly called the Afghan police "an inadequate organization, riddled with corruption." During the Obama administration's review of Afghanistan policy last year, "this issue received more attention than any other except for the question of U.S. troop levels," Holbrooke later told NEWSWEEK. "We drilled down deep into this."

The worst of it is that the police are central to Washington's plans for getting out of Afghanistan. The U.S.-backed government in Kabul will never have popular support if it can't keep people safe in their own homes and streets. Yet in a United Nations poll last fall, more than half the Afghan respondents said the police are corrupt. Police commanders have been implicated in drug trafficking, and when U.S. Marines moved into the town of Aynak last summer, villagers accused the local police force of extortion, assault, and rape.

The public's distrust of the cops is palpable in the former insurgent stronghold of Marja. Village elders welcomed the U.S. Marines who recently drove out the Taliban, but told the Americans flatly they don't want the ANP to return. "The people of Marja will tell you that one of their greatest fears was the police coming back," says Lt. Gen. William Caldwell, who took over in November as chief of the U.S. program to expand and improve Afghanistan's security forces. "You constantly hear these stories about who was worse: the Afghan police that were there or the Taliban." The success of America's counterinsurgency strategy depends on the cops, who have greater contact with local communities than the Army does. "This is not about seizing land or holding terrain; it's about the people," says Caldwell. "You have to have a police force that the people accept, believe in, and trust."

More than a year after Barack Obama took office, the president is still discovering how bad things are. At a March 12 briefing on Afghanistan with his senior advisers, he asked whether the police will be ready when America's scheduled drawdown begins in July 2011, according to a senior official who was in the room. "It's inconceivable, but in fact for eight years we weren't training the police," replied Caldwell, taking part in the meeting via video link from Afghanistan. "We just never trained them before. All we did was give them a uniform." The president looked stunned. "Eight years," he said. "And we didn't train police? It's mind-boggling." The room was silent.

<more>

http://www.newsweek.com/id/235221
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DJ13 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-10 05:31 PM
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1. Someone is getting wealthy off this
Thats a lot of money that doesnt seem to be doing anything.
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msongs Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-10 05:42 PM
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2. their JOB is to rip off US taxpayer $$$$$$$$$$$$ as does the military industrial complex nt
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Blue Owl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-10 05:51 PM
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3. This shit is really starting to piss me off now
Neither WWI nor WWII took as long as these optional Iraq and Afghanistan wars, and what the fuck are we blowing billions -- if not trillions -- of dollars on exactly, anyway?


:wtf:


:mad: :mad: :mad: :mad: :mad: :mad:
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yurbud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-23-10 02:54 AM
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4. think about the idiocy of that statement: we can't ''train'' their army and police but...
the illiterate Taliban is fighting us to a draw?

The problem is not training, but WHO we are training them to fight for--us. If they correctly perceive that we want them to fight for us not their own country. People will never betray their own people in large numbers with the enthusiasm they would defend it.
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Mopar151 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-23-10 03:18 AM
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5. Perhaps we should train Afghan women as police.
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