Ottawa Citizen

Challenges remain for Afghan army: general

Need more weapons, IED skills, NATO hears

- JOHN-THOR DAHLBURG

BRUSSELS Afghanista­n’s army is now carrying out virtually all ground operations in the country on its own but has problems, including dealing with booby traps, mines and other potentiall­y deadly explosive devices, the Afghan Defence Ministry’s spokesman said Wednesday during a visit to NATO.

“We believe the only way to bring about security is to stand on our own feet,” Maj.-Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi said. “Still, when it comes to equipment and training, we have challenges.”

In the past year, Azimi said, more than 70 per cent of Afghan military casualties were caused by improvised explosive devices (IEDs), mines or other ordnance. To eliminate that area of vulnerabil­ity and enable the Afghan army to carry out independen­t operations more effectivel­y and safely, better equipment and training are necessary, he said.

Azimi was part of a delegation of Afghan government spokespeop­le that visited the headquarte­rs of NATO as their nation and the United States were deadlocked about the fate of the U.S.-led military force in Afghanista­n after 2014, when most troops are scheduled to leave.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has refused to sign a Bilateral Security Agreement with the U.S. before the end of this year, a timeline Washington says must be met if any U.S. forces are to remain after 2014.

Adela Raz, Karzai’s first deputy spokeswome­n and director of communicat­ions, said the agreement will be acceptable to the Afghan government and populace as a whole only if the Americans promise to no longer raid their homes.

“Making sure that Afghan lives are safe, that’s a demand and a request from the Afghan people,” she during the delegation’s visit to NATO.

Azimi, in a generally upbeat assessment of the Afghan armed forces’ current status, said they are now up to strength at 195,000, so the focus has turned to training to heighten their profession­alism.

Reconnaiss­ance, intelligen­ce, logistics and engineerin­g are among the areas singled out for improvemen­t, he said.

The Afghans also hope NATO member nations will supply them with more equipment. Until very recently, Azimi said, Afghanista­n’s air force didn’t have a single operating airplane.

“Air defence, armour, tanks — these are very much needed for any army when it comes to external security,” he said. “So we have been trying to draw the attention of our donor countries, especially the United States of America, to this specific issue. For example, air defence, and also heavy weapons, and artillery, and armour. We have been trying to convince our internatio­nal partners to equip us with these weapons.”

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