Monday, December 11, 2017

These Are Afghanistan's Best Troops

Members of the Crisis Response Unit, also known as the 222, get a reconditioning training at the Special Police Training Center in Camp Lion, Afghanistan. Marcus Yam / Los Angeles Times

L.A. Times: These are Afghanistan's best troops. The U.S. is backing a plan to create many more of them

His knees swaying and his smooth face shadowed by an oversized helmet, Amir Khan Mohammad Naim did not look like an elite law enforcement officer.

But when a call went out in his rural hometown for recruits to join Afghanistan’s police commandos, the 21-year-old farmer’s son from the quiet province of Daykundi did not hesitate.

“My duty is to secure Afghanistan, meter by meter,” Naim said recently between drills at a police training center north of Kabul, where NATO advisors are overseeing part of a major transformation in Afghan security forces.

While conventional Afghan soldiers and police struggle to hold their ground against insurgents, the country’s special forces have been a rare success story, routinely responding first to attacks and leading the majority of offensive operations. Now the U.S.-led coalition is backing a plan to nearly double the size of the elite units in an effort to take back territory from the militants.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: This was the U.S. strategy deployed against the Islamic State in Iraq (i.e. training Iraqi special forces and elite Iraqi army units that targeted enemy strongholds) .... and is now being deployed in Afghanistan. But Afghanistan is going to need more than just a few thousand elite soldiers to beat back the Taliban and the Islamic State.

3 comments:

Caecus said...

Thing is, these units cost money and a lot of training and are not easily replaced, whereas the Taliban have a huge manpool of poor farmers and Qur'ans to turn them into fanatics which is arguably more effective than all that training. And unlike Iraq/Syria there is a only a weak and corrupt central authority to lead the fight, whereas in Iraq and Syria you had entire enthnic or religious groups willing to fight ISIS (Kurds and Shias)

Anonymous said...

Unfortunately the security situation in Afghanistan is very different to Iraq. The difference is the Pakistani ISI which continues to support, protect and fund the Afghani Taliban. If ISIS had friends like this in Iraq we would still be seeing those decapitation videos on the evening news.

jimbrown said...

Elite ie they dont shoot at us in training classes.