The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Kabul control slips, Afghan force losses at record — US watchdog

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WASHINGTON: Kabul’s control of Afghanista­n slipped in recent months as local security forces suffered record-level casualties while making minimal or no progress against the Taliban, a US government watchdog said Thursday.

The latest glimpse into Afghanista­n’s security crisis highlights persistent problems among police and army units who have faced years of devastatin­g losses, and shows the Taliban’s resilience 17 years after the US-led invasion.

Numbers provided by Resolute Support, the US-led Nato mission in Afghanista­n, show that during the last quarter, the Afghan government controlled or influenced 226 of the country’s 407 districts – or 55.5 per cent.

According to the US Special Inspector General for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion (SIGAR), which compiled the data, the figure marks a slight drop (0.7 per cent) over the previous quarter.

It is the lowest level since SIGAR began tracking district control in November 2015.

Of the remaining districts, SIGAR assessed that 49 were under insurgent control or influence (12 per cent).

The balance – 132 districts – are considered ‘contested’ between the Kabul government and the Taliban or other insurgent groups.

In terms of the Afghan population itself, Kabul controls or influences 65.2 per cent, the same amount as a year ago.

General John Nicholson, who is now retired but at the time was head of Resolute Support, said in November 2017 that the Afghan security forces would expand control of the population to 80 per cent over the next two years.

Bill Roggio, an Afghanista­n expert and senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, told AFP such a scenario is unlikely.

“Barring a dramatic turnaround by Afghan security forces and the US re-committing itself to improving the security situation, I do not see how that is possible,” he told AFP.

Roggio, who runs a website called Long War Journal, cowrote a piece in which he assessed that more than half the Afghan population now lives outside of government control.

Underscori­ng the security weaknesses, powerful police chief General Abdul Raziq was among three people killed in a brazen insider attack on a high-level security meeting this month in Kandahar.

The meeting was also attended by General Scott Miller, the top US and Nato commander in Afghanista­n.

He escaped unhurt, but US Brigadier General Jeffrey Smiley was among 13 people wounded in the shooting, which the Taliban said had targeted Miller and Raziq. —

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