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NATO...Are Its Final Days Just Ahead
Is NATO Losing the Real Battle in
Afghanistan?
By RACHEL MORARJEE/KABUL
This week's deadly civilian bombing has further eroded the support of
locals, who want to see less guns and more butter from the international
force.
In the vineyards and poppy fields of southern Afghanistan it is hard to
know who the enemy is. In their black turbans, Taliban fighters can
vanish like ghosts into the local population, leaving NATO soldiers
shooting into thin air, or worse still at the wrong targets — which is
what happened this week as the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan came to a
close.
Afghan officials said dozens of civilians were killed late Tuesday when
NATO warplanes bombarded a village in the district of Panjwai just 20
kilometers outside the largest city in southern Afghanistan, the former
Taliban stronghold of Kandahar. Panjwai district has been the scene of
some of the fiercest fighting in the Afghan south this summer, with NATO
killing at least 500 suspected insurgents in the two-week-long Operation
Medusa, which concluded last month.
Control of Panjwai, which lies so close to the political heart of the
Afghan south, is vital, and it seems NATO's hold on the district is
slipping. Lieutenant General David Richards called Operation Medusa a
"significant success," but weeks later the Taliban have come back with a
vengeance, staging large-scale attacks on NATO bases in the area and
scotching NATO claims that they had driven the Taliban out of Panjwai.
Taliban fighters launched a series of bloody attacks on NATO troops late
on Tuesday night, the second day of the Eid al-Fitr holiday, and NATO
struck back, bombing houses where Taliban fighters had taken refuge.
Eyewitnesses in the village of Zangwat said that 25 houses had been
razed to the ground, and their inhabitants killed and injured as Taliban
fighters took shelter behind their walls, using the local population as
human shields. Niaz Mohammad Saradi, district governor of Panjwai
district, said 60 people were killed, while other officials put the
death toll as high as 85. NATO says it has confirmed 12 civilian
casualties. Whatever the final number, the mounting bloodshed among old
men, women and children in southern Afghanistan is whittling away
support for the NATO mission.
Akbar Khakrizwal, a tribal elder and former security official in
Kandahar city, said the Taliban are gaining strength in Panjwai on a
daily basis. "For more than four months NATO has been fighting in
Panjwai district, " he said, "and they cannot drive 500 Taliban away, or
kill them or arrest them. They have the wrong strategy." He contended
that NATO troops are playing into the hands of the Taliban. "NATO are
very impatient when the Taliban attack them from a residential area and
they reply by bombing, and that is what the Taliban want. They want to
make NATO look bad."
Sam Zarifi, of Human Rights Watch in New York City, said NATO's military
offensive, which has relied heavily on airpower due to a shortage of
ground troops, had caused serious resentment among Afghans and been
counterproductive. "The Soviets tried and failed to defeat Afghan
guerrillas by using massive firepower, so we know clearly that that is
not the way to win in Afghanistan," he said. "You have to win the
populace over, not kill it." But NATO spokesman Mark Laity defended
NATO's strategy in the south, saying it was important that NATO showed
they could win militarily against the Taliban. "We have shown that in
combat terms we can be the winning side," he said, adding that now
reconstruction and development would have to follow.
After over two decades of vicious fighting, most ordinary Afghans in the
south are willing to give NATO a chance. But if the alliance is to
prevail, it will probably need to reexamine its strategy. "At the moment
there is very little public support for NATO, but it is not the end of
the world," said Haji Abdul Khaliq, a senator in neighbouring Uruzgan
province. "If NATO wants cooperation from people they should change
their strategy and stop fighting and build roads and schools."
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