The Manila Times

Afghanista­n still crippled by corruption—US inspector

- AFP

WASHINGTON: Two years after NATO handed responsibi­lity for Afghanista­n’s security to local forces, the country remains crippled by corruption and its troops can barely hold the Taliban at bay, a US inspector said Wednesday.

Since US- led NATO troops stopped leading patrols and stepped into an advisory and support role at the end of 2014, Afghan army and police forces have suffered thousands of casualties and face continual assaults from a well- funded and well- armed Taliban.

“As much as I wish I could say much has improved in Afghanista­n over the past two years, I cannot,” John Sopko, the Special Inspector General for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion ( SIGAR), told a Washington think tank.

Sopko was speaking as his agency published a list of highrisk threats to Afghanista­n, less than two weeks before incoming President- elect Donald Trump takes office.

Just as President Barack Obama did eight years ago, Trump is inher impossible to resolve.

Trump has offered few indication­s of his plans for Afghanista­n.

In a 2013 tweet, he said “Let’s get out” of the country and said the money America spends there would be better used at home.

Neither he nor his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton gave Afghanista­n more than a passing mention during the presidenti­al campaign.

Sopko noted the number of armed groups opposing the Afghan government is growing, and said the amount of Afghan districts under government con 70.5 percent at the start of 2016 to just 63.4 percent by the end of August.

The Afghan army is “basically playing whack- a- mole following the Taliban around Afghanista­n,” Sopko said.

“At a minimum, they’re playing to the Taliban.”

New bombings in Kabul

Underscori­ng the fragile security situation, bombings across three Afghan cities including Kabul killed around 50 people and wounded 100 others Tuesday, in a day of carnage as Taliban insurgents escalated their deadly winter campaign of violence.

To date, America has spent more than $115 billion in US taxpayer money on reconstruc­tion efforts in Afghanista­n.

- cluded, the United States has spent close to $1 trillion.

Complicati­ng matters, a longstandi­ng issue of Afghan commanders lying about troop numbers to swindle the payment system remains a stubborn problem.

The Afghan army likely still has tens of thousands of these phantom troops on its payrolls, Sopko said.

“Afghan commanders often pocket the paychecks of ‘ ghost soldiers’ for whom the US is paying salaries,” he said.

He added there is evidence the Taliban has instructed field commanders to buy US-supplied weapons, fuel and ammunition from Afghan soldiers.

“To do so is both easier and less expensive for the insurgents,” he told the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, noting that the Taliban were now part of the US- provided weapons “supply chain.”

The Taliban has plenty of cash, thanks to booming poppy production that is growing at near-record levels as eradicatio­n efforts falter.

CSIS expert Anthony Cordesman, who hosted Sopko, said in a report this month that it is “more than possible” Afghan forces will be locked in a war of attrition with no clear end, and that 2017 could mark “at least be the beginning of a major defeat” for them.

‘Stalemate’

In 2015, Afghan police sustained more than 5,000 fatalities and saw the regional capital Kunduz briefly captured by the Taliban.

Casualties were significan­tly higher in 2016.

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Joe Dunford, has called the Afghan situation a “stalemate,” though commanders later tried to massage the assessment, calling it an “equilibriu­m.”

Obama has cut the US troop presence to about 8,400. Sopko warned the incoming Trump administra­tion about the complexiti­es of making further adjustment­s.

“Withdraw, and the democratic government may well fall. Stay, and continue what we have been doing and we may be faced with what General Dunford has described as a stalemate,” Sopko said.

Still, Sopko noted some signs of improvemen­t.

He said both President Ashraf Ghani and Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah had cooperated with US efforts to prevent waste and fraud.

He also highlighte­d an anticorrup­tion justice center that has begun to prosecute graft cases.

Repeated bids to launch peace negotiatio­ns with the Taliban - ing season is expected to kick off in the spring.

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