Kabul, Dec 29 : The Taliban has billed a rash of
insider attacks targeting international troops in Afghanistan as an effective
battlefield strategy, but detailed data disclosed recently by the U.S. military
suggest that the largest percentage of such incidents probably stemmed from
personal motives rather than enemy infiltration.
Of the 79 insider
attacks from May 2007 to September 2012, military investigators found that 38
percent were likely to have been triggered by personal motives; 6 percent were
suspected cases of enemy infiltration; and 14 percent were attributed to
co-option, in which insurgents persuaded a member of the security forces to help
carry out an attack. The cause of 38 percent of the cases was unknown or still
under investigation.
The data on attacks by Afghan security personnel or
military interpreters were included in a Pentagon report to Congress on
operations in Afghanistan that was released last week.
After a sharp
uptick in the number of “green on blue” attacks in the summer, the U.S. military
temporarily suspended joint patrols. At least 116 NATO troops have been killed
in insider attacks since 2007, including 51 this year.
U.S. officials say
they remain focused on enhancing training and security procedures to mitigate
what they see as an enduring threat. As of Oct. 13, insider attacks accounted
for 21 percent of NATO combat deaths in Afghanistan this year, an all-time high
since the military started tracking such incidents in 2007.
“I would be
very loath to say that it’s a problem that’s been solved,” a senior defense
official said last week, briefing journalists on the Report on Progress Toward
Security and Stability in Afghanistan, which is issued twice a year. “It’s a
problem we will continue to address.”
The official, who spoke on the
condition of anonymity per department protocol, said that regardless of the
motive behind insider attacks, “they were all used by the Taliban as part of
their narrative.”
The U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan has developed
several initiatives to combat the threat, increased its emphasis on cultural
sensitivity and established a “guardian angel” system in which designated
American troops watch over their comrades during meetings and patrols with
Afghans.
An Oct. 12 Army draft handbook on the insider threat in
Afghanistan summarized a handful of cases in which Afghans opened fire on their
foreign allies, providing a rare window into the kind of situations that sparked
attacks. The draft said many altercations occurred because foreign troops “lack
empathy for Muslims and/or cultural norms, resulting in a violent reaction” from
Afghan troops.
One of the shootings cited occurred during an argument
over the propriety of smoking during the holy Muslim month of Ramadan, according
to the draft manual, which was obtained by The Washington Post. While waiting
outside a meeting of U.S. and Afghan security leaders, an American soldier asked
an Afghan for a lighter so he could smoke.
“The [Afghan soldier] refused
and rebuffed the U.S. service member for wanting to smoke during Ramadan,” a
period in which Muslims fast and refrain from smoking during daylight hours,
according to the draft. “The U.S. service member cursed the [Afghan soldier] and
disparaged his religious beliefs,” the report said. As the argument escalated,
the Afghan raised his weapon. Both the Afghan and the American fired shots, and
both were wounded.
The 75-page manual, which the U.S.-led command in
Afghanistan has not adopted or endorsed, contains several recommendations,
including that foreign and Afghan troops should avoid discussion of religion,
women, sex and human rights. The authors of the draft, which was disclosed by
the Wall Street Journal, also suggested that female foreign troops avoid wearing
shorts around Afghan men.
Ahmad Shuja, an Afghan writer and analyst who
heads the Washington-based Foundation for Afghanistan, said leaders of the
U.S.-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan have done a good
job of understanding and explaining the cultural differences that have created
friction.
“That’s the easy part,” Shuja said. “The hard part is
translating that knowledge down to the fighting unit: changing ISAF soldiers’
behavior and changing how an Afghan soldier perceives a cultural faux
pas.”
Ends
SA/EN
Home »
» Many insider attacks in Afghanistan stem from personal motives, data suggest
Many insider attacks in Afghanistan stem from personal motives, data suggest
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment