Feral Jundi

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Publications: Tell Me Why We’re There? Enduring Interests in Afghanistan (and Pakistan) by Fick, Kilcullen, Nagl, Singh

Filed under: Afghanistan,Pakistan,Publications — Tags: , , , , , , , — Matt @ 4:01 PM

   If you care about the direction we are taking in the war, then I highly recommend reading this report.  The authors should give you a clue as to how important this thing is. If President Obama was smart, he would read this report as well, and not have some staffer spoon feed it to him. –Matt

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Tell Me Why We’re There? Enduring Interests in Afghanistan (and Pakistan)Publication Type: Policy Brief

Publication Date: 01/22/2009

Author(s): Nathaniel C. Fick, David Kilcullen, John A. Nagl, Vikram J. Singh 

January 2009 – In 2009, the Obama administration will attempt to deliver on campaign promises to change the Afghan war’s trajectory. In April, the Strasbourg NATO summit will determine the alliance’s role in shaping the future of the country and the region. By the fall, Afghans will have voted for their president for only the second time since 2001, an event which may irrevocably set the country’s course. By the end of this summer’s fighting season, the war in Afghanistan will not yet be won, but it could well be lost.

After seven years and the deaths of more than a thousand American and coalition troops, there is still no consensus on whether the future of Afghanistan matters to the United States and Europe, or on what can realistically be achieved there. Afghanistan does matter. A stable Afghanistan is necessary to defeat Al Qaeda and to further stability in South and Central Asia. Understanding the war in Afghanistan, maintaining domestic and international support for it, and prosecuting it well requires three things: a clear articulation of U.S. interests in Afghanistan, a concise definition of what the coalition seeks to achieve there, and a detailed strategy to guide the effort.

U.S. interests in Afghanistan may be summarized as “two no’s”: there must be no sanctuary for terrorists with global reach in Afghanistan, and there must be no broader regional meltdown. Securing these objectives requires helping the Afghans to build a sustainable system of governance that can adequately ensure security for the Afghan people—the “yes” upon which a successful exit strategy depends.

Read the Rest of the Paper Here

Sunday, December 7, 2008

News: More Than 160 US, NATO Vehicles Burned in Pakistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,News,Pakistan — Tags: , , — Matt @ 1:18 PM

     Pathetic.  Whomever the security company was, that was contracted to protect this depot, did a horrific job of protecting it.  When guards just stand by helplessly, and allow the attackers to come in and destroy everything, then something is severely screwed up.  That much is apparent.   You get what you pay for I guess, and we need to take a more assertive role in protecting our vital supplies out there.  

     Pakistan is doing a terrible job, Pakistani PSC’s are doing a terrible job, and 70 % of our logistics comes from Peshawar.  If we are serious about fighting the war in Afghanistan, then we need to get serious about protecting our logistics.  I say pay the money to hire competent security to protect these convoys and depots, or send the troops to protect this stuff. Or get out of the business of even dealing with Pakistan for our logistics. –Head Jundi

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More than 160 US, NATO vehicles burned in Pakistan

By RIAZ KHAN 

December 7, 2008

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — Militants torched 160 vehicles, including dozens of Humvees destined for U.S. and allied forces fighting in Afghanistan, in the boldest attack so far on the critical military supply line through Pakistan.

The American military said Sunday’s raid on two transport terminals near the beleaguered Pakistani city of Peshawar would have “minimal” impact on anti-Taliban operations set to expand with the arrival of thousands more troops next year.

However, the attack feeds concern that insurgents are trying to choke the route through the famed Khyber Pass, which carries up to 70 percent of the supplies for Western forces in landlocked Afghanistan, and drive up the cost of the war.

(more…)

Sunday, November 16, 2008

News: Logistics Hell in Afghanistan and Pakistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,News,Pakistan — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:21 PM

 

     If there was any an indicator of how things are going in a war, you can always look at the health of the logistics tail.  And to me, just looking at these three stories that cover Pakistan and Afghanistan, it is obvious that there are some serious security issues with logistics going on.  

     The first story is one that I posted before, about Commando Security (a local national security company in Afghanistan) and their efforts in the war.  The loss of life and the amount of actual fighting that this PSC is doing is stunning. Stacks of coffins…fighting daily?  

     The second story is about Pakistan shutting down the Khyber Pass. The Taliban and the various tribes are raping these convoys.  Just lask week, these guys were able to attack a convoy and steal some Humvee destined for Afghanistan.  The pictures of these things in Taliban hands are embarrassing to say the least.

     The final story is about Highway One in Afghanistan, and how dangerous that has become.  It sounds like IED hell, and the Taliban and company are certainly applying the lessons of Iraq to their own campaign in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

     On Feral Jundi, we talked about this before.  That our achilles heel in the war over there is logistics.  The Taliban know this, and they are doing what they can to shut it down and/or plunder it.  All I know is that Task Force Odin better get busy and get some eyes on these routes, and start working with the hunters to protect these routes.  Or maybe out of pure human decency, they could also give a heads up to these PSC’s that are operating over there. That means communicating with PSC’s like Commando Security, or we can continue to stand by while these forces get mutilated by these guys.  

     The other thing that bothers me about this, is commerce. If we want the Afghani people to be happy with their government, security of commerce must be a priority.  Take charge of the roads and own them.  That means patrol, post overwatch on stretches of road, and work with the villages that are near these roads.  Set up a text messaging/mobile phone road watch crew, and pay them to report on Taliban activity in the villages and roads.  Do something to empower the local populations, and get the police busy on this stuff.  The security of logistics and commerce on these roads are vital, and we must do a better job of protection of said  activities.  –Head Jundi 

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 Taliban

Baitullah Mehsud’s Taliban pose in front of a captured US Humvee. Baitullah’s Taliban flag is draped over the hood. Photo from AFP. 

‘Every moment is frightening’

Private security personnel easy targets in Afghanistan

Tom Blackwell,  National Post  

Published: Monday, October 20, 2008

As he girded himself for another shift protecting a massive NATO supply convoy this week, Rozi Mohammed made a frank admission: The work terrifies him.

“We are afraid of IEDs, we’re afraid of rockets, we’re afraid of bullets, we’re afraid of ambushes,” said the boyish-looking 18-year-old, an AK-47 slung over his narrow shoulders. “Every moment is frightening.”

He has good reason to be fearful. Just this year, about 160 of Mr. Mohammed’s colleagues have been killed defending such convoys against almost daily Taliban attacks. Only the day before, two died in a roadside blast.

In his compound, a stack of empty coffins sits ready for the next victims.

“Every day, we have seen our men wounded and killed,” the teenager said.

Mr. Mohammed does not belong to any military or police organization. He is part of Afghanistan’s growing private army: security contractors who fill the gaps in the foreign military and development mission here, protecting diplomats, aid workers, outposts and the all-important convoys.

To satisfy the voracious appetite of thousands of NATO troops for food, fuel and other supplies, hundreds of trucks a week must traverse highways that more and more are rife with insurgents.

(more…)

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

News: American Shot Dead in Pakistan’s Frontier Peshawar

Filed under: News,Pakistan — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:01 PM

   Rest in peace, whomever you are.  I can only imagine that this guy that was killed, was operating under amazing pressure and danger.  –Head Jundi 

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American shot dead in Pakistan’s frontier Peshawar

Wed Nov 12, 2008 

By Faris Ali

PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Nov 12 (Reuters) – Gunmen killed a U.S. aid official on Wednesday outside his home in Peshawar, police said, the frontier Pakistani city near Afghanistan which has borne the brunt of a growing Islamist insurgency.

Spiralling violence has raised fears of instability in nuclear-armed Pakistan, whose support is seen as vital to the defeat of al Qaeda globally and the Taliban in Afghanistan.

(more…)

Monday, September 22, 2008

Photo: Massive Crater

Filed under: Al Qaeda,Pakistan,Photo — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 11:35 AM

Pakistan Blast

 

A vast crater, some 40 feet wide and 25 feet deep, lay at the security barrier to the Marriott hotel in Pakistan. Witnesses said security guards and their gate posts were buried under a mound of rubble.

 

Photo: Mian Khursheed/Reuters

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