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  • Feb
    27

    BAGHDAD – With President Barack Obama set to announce the withdrawal of most U.S. forces from Iraq over the next 18 months, some Iraqis say they fear that such a move could lead to a resurgence of violence.”Terrorists are just waiting for the Americans to leave the country in order to turn things upside down,” said Ibrahim Salman, 55, a Baghdad municipality official.

    U.S. soldiers take up position to secure the opening of a water treatment plant in Baghdad's Sadr City on Jan. 21, 2009.

    U.S. soldiers take up position to secure the opening of a water treatment plant in Baghdad's Sadr City on Jan. 21, 2009.

    Salman, who lost relatives and friends during the sectarian violence that raged across Iraq during 2005 and 2006, said armed groups could take advantage of the American military pullout to terrorize the country once again.”I am against a hasty evacuation of U.S. troops from Iraq because security is not completely achieved throughout Iraq,” Salman said. “The Iraqi police force and army still need more training, experience, intelligence gathering and sophisticated military equipment.”

    Obama’s plan reportedly accounts for further training for Iraqi forces. According to senior administration officials, U.S. Troops will withdrawal slowly over the next 18 months– dropping from the current number of about 142,000 to a residual force of 50,000 that will carry out clean-up and protection operations. These troops also will work closely with the Iraqi military, which is expected to take over all daily combat missions by August 2010, NBC News reports.

    ‘Responsible and gradual’
    Diana Obaedi, a 24-year-old private secretary, said she supported the idea of a “responsible and gradual withdrawal” of American troops. But as someone whose family was displaced by armed groups, she also was concerned that Iraq must be “stable and secure” before the Americans leave.

    A barber in his late forties, Sa’ad Yassin, echoed this sentiment.

    “Of course, nobody likes his country to be occupied, but I want joint Iraqi and American forces to get rid of the terrorists, criminals, gangs and sleeper cells who are waiting to jump and control the land and people,” Yassin said.

    Adel Abdul-Jabbar, a technician in Baghdad, fears there will be a bloodbath after U.S. forces leave.

    “Pulling their forces and leaving Iraq to be devoured by Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia and Turkey? Oh! No!” he said. “No, I am sure al-Qaida and militias will destroy Iraq and Iraqis will be swimming in blood pools.”

    ‘History repeats itself’
    Others expressed disbelief. Abu Ahmed, a retiree, laughed at the notion that the American forces will ever leave Iraq.

    “They say ‘history repeats itself,’ I won’t believe the American administration is going to pull its forces out of Iraq. They will stay for decades just like they did in Germany and Japan,” he said.

    Still, Amer Qabani, a 33-year-old oil-driller, was optimistic about his country’s future and thinks that Obama is a man of his word.

    “He promised in his presidential campaign to responsibly withdraw his troops from Iraq,” said Qabani. “I guess we will have to wait and see. I think Iraqi forces will be ready.”


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  • Feb
    16

    russia12The first American non-military cargo to Afghanistan is being put together in Riga, Latvia. The Russian Foreign Ministry says that the freight will be sent to Afghanistan through the Russian territory shortly.

    “A consignment to be soon dispatched by rail to Afghanistan via Russia is currently being assembled in Riga,” the source in the ministry was quoted by RIA news agency as saying.

    The ministry also announced that the terms of the transit are commercial.

    “The transit will be conducted on commercial terms. Most probably, the first trains will cross Russia within the next few days.”

    Russia and NATO signed a framework agreement on non-military cargoes in April, 2008.

    Some NATO nations, which include France, Germany and Canada, already send their non-lethal supplies for their troops in Afghanistan through Russia upon existing bilateral agreements.

    Recently, due to Taliban activities, the alliance’s countries are experiencing difficulties transporting their cargoes on the traditional route through Pakistan. Therefore, currently NATO is searching alternative ways of supplying its forces in the country.

    In Afghanistan, there are 62,000 foreign troops and American president Barrack Obama is due to deploy another 30,000 U.S military personnel there.


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  • Feb
    16

    afghanistan2LOGAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan – Close to 3,000 American soldiers who recently arrived in Afghanistan to secure two violent provinces near Kabul have begun operations in the field and already are seeing combat, the unit’s spokesman said Monday.

    The new troops are the first wave of an expected surge of reinforcements this year. The process began to take shape under President George Bush but has been given impetus by President Barack Obama’s call for an increased focus on Afghanistan.

    U.S. commanders have been contemplating sending up to 30,000 more soldiers to bolster the 33,000 already here, but the new administration is expected to initially approve only a portion of that amount. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Monday the president would decide soon.

    The new unit — the 3rd Brigade Combat Team of the 10th Mountain Division — moved into Logar and Wardak provinces last month, and the soldiers from Fort Drum, N.Y., are now stationed in combat outposts throughout the provinces.

    Militants have attacked several patrols with rifles and rocket-propelled grenades, including one ambush by 30 insurgents, Lt. Col. Steve Osterhozer, the brigade spokesman, said.

    Several roadside bombs also have exploded next to the unit’s MRAPs — mine-resistance patrol vehicles — but caused no casualties, he said.

    “In every case our vehicles returned with overwhelming fire,” Ostehozer said. “We have not suffered anything more than a few bruises, while several insurgents have been killed.”

    Commanders are in the planning stages of larger scale operations expected to be launched in the coming weeks.

    Militant activity has spiked in Logar and Wardak over the last year as the resurgent Taliban has spread north toward Kabul from its traditional southern power base. Residents say insurgents roam wide swaths of Wardak, a mountainous province whose capital is about 35 miles from Kabul.

    afghanThe region has been covered in snow recently, but Col. David B. Haight, commander of the 3rd Brigade, said last week that he expects contact with insurgents to increase soon.

    “The weather has made it so the enemy activity is somewhat decreased right now, and I expect it to increase in the next two to three months,” Haight said at a news conference.

    Haight said he believes the increase of militant activity in the two provinces is not ideologically based but stems from poor Afghans being enticed into fighting by their need for money. Quoting the governor of Logar, the colonel called it an “economic war.”

    Afghan officials “don’t believe it’s hardcore al-Qaida operatives that you’re never going to convert anyway,” Haight said. “They believe that it’s the guys who say, ‘Hey you want $100 to shoot an RPG at a Humvee when it goes by,’ and the guy says, ‘Yeah I’ll do that, because I’ve got to feed my family.’”

    Still, Haight said there are hardcore fighters in the region, some of them allied with Jalaludin Haqqani and his son Siraj, a fighting family with a long history in Afghanistan. The two militant leaders are believed to be in Pakistan.

    Logar Gov. Atiqullah Ludin said at a news conference alongside Haight that U.S. troops will need to improve both security and the economic situation.

    “There is a gap between the people and the government,” Ludin said. “Assistance in Logar is very weak, and the life of the common man has not improved.”

    Ludin also urged that U.S. forces be careful and not act on bad intelligence to launch night raids on Afghans who turn out to be innocent.

    It is a common complaint from Afghan leaders. President Hamid Karzai has long pleaded with U.S. forces not to kill innocent Afghans during military operations and says he hopes to see night raids curtailed.

    Pointing to the value of such operations, the U.S. military said Monday that a raid in northwest Badghis province killed a feared militant leader named Ghulam Dastagir and eight other fighters.

    afgan1Other raids, though, have killed innocent Afghans who were only defending their village against a nighttime incursion by forces they didn’t know, officials say.

    “We need to step back and look at those carefully, because the danger they carry is exponential,” Ludin said.

    Haight cautioned last week that civilian casualties could increase with the presence of his 2,700 soldiers.

    “We understand the probability of increased civilian casualties is there because of increased U.S. forces,” said the colonel, who has also commanded Special Operations task forces in Afghanistan and Iraq. “Our plan is to do no operations without ANA (Afghan army) and ANP (Afghan police), to help us be more precise.”

    The U.S. military and Afghan Defense Ministry announced last week that Afghan officers and soldiers would take on a greater role in military operations, including in specialized night raids, with the aim of decreasing civilian deaths.

    The presence of U.S. troops in Wardak and Logar is the first time such a large contingent of American power has been so close to Kabul, fueling concerns that militants could be massing for a push at the capital. Haight dismissed those fears.

    “Our provinces butt up against the southern boundary of Kabul and therefore there is the perception that Kabul could be surrounded,” Haight said. “But the enemy cannot threaten Kabul. He’s not big enough, he’s not strong enough, he doesn’t have the technology. He can conduct attacks but he can’t completely disrupt the governance in Kabul.”

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