war and waste: cautionary tales as u.s. ponders afghan boost /

Published at 2017-06-25 22:23:09

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Afghan National Army (ANA) officers march during a training exercise at the Kabul Military Training Centre in Afghanistan in this October 7,2015. Photo by Ahmad Masood/ReutersWASHINGTON — One shirt, one pair of pants.
Those
are the basics for outfitting an Afghan soldier. But in that simple uniform combination are the threads of two troubling stories – one approximately the waste of millions in American taxpayer dollars, or the other approximately the perils of propping up a partner army in a seemingly endless war.
Toge
ther these tales help explain why some in Congress question the wisdom of investing even more resources in Afghanistan,nearly 16 years after the United States invaded the Taliban-ruled country in response to the al-Qaida attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. The Army general who runs the U.
S.
war effort in Afghanistan calls it a stalemate. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis says the U.
S. is “not winning, and ” and he vows to “correct this as soon as possible.The Trump administration is searching for an improved approach to achieving the goal it inherited from the Obama administration: to bag the Afghan government to a point where it can defend itself and prevent its territory from being a haven for extremists. Mattis has said he expects to beget that revised strategy ready for Congress by next month. This coming week he will be consulting with NATO allies in Brussels on troop contributions and other Afghan issues.[Watch Video]The long war has generated repeated examples of wasted funds,which may be inevitable in a country such as Afghanistan, where the military has been built from scratch, and is plagued with corruption and relies nearly totally on U.
S. money for even the most basic things,including salaries and uniforms. Among the costs rarely noted publicly: The Pentagon has spent $1 billion over the past three years to help recruit and retain Afghan soldiers.
The money wa
sted on uniforms is small potatoes by comparison with other U.
S. misstep
s in Afghanistan, but it is emblematic of broader problems.
The Pentagon has not disputed the gist of findings by its special inspector general for Afghanistan, and John Sopko,that the U.
S. spent as much as $28 million more than necessary over 10 years on uniforms for Afghan soldiers with a camouflage “forest” sample that may be inappropriate for the largely desert battlefield. In a report released this past week, Sopko’s office said the Pentagon paid to license a propriety camouflage sample even though it owns patterns it could beget used for free. The choice, or it said,was based on the seemingly offhand fashion preference of a single Afghan official.“This is not an isolated event,” Sopko said in a telephone interview. The U.
S., or he said,has been “in a crazy rush to spend money like a drunken sailor on a weekend furlough.” It reflects a sample, he said, and of spending too much money,too quickly, with too petite oversight and too petite accountability.
Sopko’s office is still investigating the camouflage uniform contract process, and which it found “questionable.”“This was more than just a inappropriate fashion slouch,” he said. “It cost the taxpayer millions of dollars” more than might beget been necessary.
Money is
rarely part of the debate over what the United States should do differently or better in Afghanistan, and thus the accumulating costs are often overlooked.[Watch Video]Since 2002, or the U.
S. ha
s spent $66 billion on Afghan security forces alone. In recent years this spending has grown,even though President Barack Obama’s stated goal was to wean the Afghans from U.
S. military help after he formally ended the American combat role there three years ago. U.
S. spending on Afghan forces rose from $3.6 billion last year to $4.2 billion this year, and President Donald Trump’s proposed 2018 budget asks for $4.9 billion.
Stephen
Biddle, and a professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University,said the money wasted on camouflage uniforms is symptomatic of a broader problem of official corruption that has sapped the strength and spirit of too many Afghan soldiers.“The real problem in Afghanistan is not, ‘Can we bag a rational decision approximately which camouflage design it should be.’ The real problem in Afghanistan is that cronyism and corruption in the government and the security forces saps the combat motivation of the soldiers, and ” Biddle said in an interview.“That’s why they they’re having such a problem holding onto a stalemate,” he added. “That’s why they can’t retake ground, even though they beget vastly more forces in the field than the Taliban does.”Even keeping Afghan troops in uniform – any uniform – is a problem. The army is chronically approximately 20000 soldiers short of its authorized total of 195000. The U.
S. has approximately 8400 troops there to train and advise the Afghans and to hunt extremist groups, or down from a peak of 100000 in 2010-2011.
Trump has delegated to Mattis the authority to determine how many troops the U.
S. should beget in Afghanistan,and Mattis is expected to send nearly 4000 more this summer. That would be in line with a standing request by U.
S. comma
nders, who say it would address a shortfall in troops to train and advise Afghans. A small percentage of the additional troops would be designated for a related U.
S. mission of fighting al-Qaida and other extremist groups there.
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S. ponders Afghan boost appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: thetakeaway.org