Pubdate: Thu, 29 Jul 2010 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Matthew Rosenberg DRUG USE, POOR DISCIPLINE AFFLICT AFGHANISTAN'S ARMY KHADAKALAY, Afghanistan-It took a few tense seconds for U.S. and Afghan soldiers to realize that a sudden burst of gunfire and explosions one recent afternoon wasn't aimed at them but at a different patrol a mile away. Everyone relaxed. A U.S. lieutenant resumed chatting with village elders. And four Afghan soldiers leaned back on some idle farm equipment and lit up a joint in full view of U.S. troops and an American reporter. Use of marijuana, opium and heroin among Afghan troops, even while on patrol, is just one of the challenges coalition forces face in working with the Afghan National Army as they begin a major push against the Taliban in and around the southern city of Kandahar. U.S. soldiers complain that poor discipline, drug use, a trigger-happy attitude and general carelessness by Afghan soldiers are putting American lives in danger and could ultimately undermine efforts to win over wary Afghans, the main aim of the campaign. The U.S. strategy for leaving Afghanistan is heavily dependent on building capable Afghan military and police forces that can take over. At a conference in Kabul last week, Afghan President Hamid Karzai won international backing for his forces to take the lead in securing Afghanistan by 2014. Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S. joint chiefs of staffs, backed Mr. Karzai's deadline in comments in Kabul this weekend, but he acknowledged that significant challenges first must be overcome. "It will take a continued concerted effort to train Afghan security forces to succeed here and to take this responsibility," Adm. Mullen said. "It's well within reach to achieve the outcome that President Karzai set for 2014. I wouldn't say it's easily achievable. We'll have to work pretty hard to do it." An Afghan defense ministry spokesman, Gen. Zahir Azimi, said there were few drug or discipline problems in the Afghan army. The marijuana smoking on the patrol was a rare one-off incident and was being investigated, he said, adding that if the soldiers were found to have been getting high on duty, they would be discharged. U.S. soldiers here have sometimes been disciplined for marijuana use, though commanders say they don't know of any cases of U.S. troops openly smoking pot while on patrol in a hostile area. The latest evidence of discipline problems within the Afghan forces came to light this past weekend in the trove of documents made public by the website WikiLeaks, mostly raw coalition field reports from 2004 through 2009. A report from April 11, 2009, said border police in southern Afghanistan were high on opium and having a party when they got into a fight with interpreters used by coalition forces who shared the base. The fight ended with a single gunshot that killed one of the police. The coalition soldiers writing the report said they weren't sure who fired it. Another report in the leaked documents described an incident just two days earlier in which an Afghan soldier was said to have shot his sergeant after an argument at their base in Helmand province in the south. The report said the soldier was arrested and the sergeant evacuated for treatment; it wasn't clear whether he survived. The frequency of incidents in which Afghan soldiers and police get into fights or shoot each other or civilians is alarming, a senior officer of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization said on Monday. The leaked documents described at least 72. The NATO officer described such fights and shootings as a consistent problem. Problem soldiers most often are new recruits, pushed quickly out of basic training to fill recruitment goals, say U.S. and Afghan officials. The Afghan army has grown rapidly to almost 134,000, while the police force is quickly closing in on 109,000, a target set for October. By the end of 2011, the goal is 171,600 soldiers and 134,000 police. In contrast to the fresh recruits, many veteran Afghan enlisted men and officers have fought for one side or the other during the 30 years of war in their country. They remain eager to battle the Taliban, and the U.S. soldiers who have fought alongside them praise their bravery in battle, even if they often lack the training and discipline to fight together as a cohesive unit. Top U.S. commanders also praise the elite Afghan commando units as highly effective forces. "They're bulldogs," said Staff Sgt. James Kazukietas of the 101st Airborne Division, deployed in areas outside Kandahar. "They're not always taking aimed shots, but they're taking shots. They just need to be refined." U.S. and allied commanders have presented as one of their public messages the notion that Afghans are full partners and are leading many operations. They used this message during February's offensive in the southern area of Marjah, where coalition forces did much of the heavy lifting, and are now pressing it as the coalition begins an effort to secure Kandahar and the surrounding Taliban-held hinterlands, the heartland of the insurgency. As thousands of newly deployed U.S. soldiers take up positions across the southern region, almost every American unit is being paired with an Afghan one. They are sharing bases, going on combined patrols and planning operations together. With the primary focus placed on protecting civilians and propping up Afghanistan's weak government, rather than on killing Taliban, Afghan forces must begin taking a lead role, U.S. commanders say. Yet they often lack the ability and wherewithal, according to Western officials and experts. And even when offering praise of veteran Afghan troops, U.S. soldiers often end up criticizing what they consider the occasional belligerence of their comrades. Consider a recent meeting between U.S. and Afghan officers at a small base west of Kandahar, Combat Outpost Ashoqeh. The Americans were trying to plan an operation to rout the Taliban from a nearby village and hoped to launch the mini-offensive within days. There were problems, said the Afghan commander, Capt. Safi Ahmad. He would need some men from another Afghan army company, but its commander didn't want to spare them. There had been some kind of shooting a few days earlier between men from the two Afghan units, so they would have trouble working together, he said. The U.S. officers nodded patiently. They tried, without success, to get a clearer explanation of the shooting. They left the meeting resigned to postponing the operation until at least late September, after the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan that starts in about two weeks. "It may take even longer. We don't know," said Capt. Brant Auge, the U.S. commander at the outpost. Earlier this month at Combat Outpost Ashoqeh, U.S. soldiers thought they were going to watch Afghan soldiers test-fire mortars on a mountain behind their shared base. Instead, they found the Afghans getting ready to bombard a village that is frequently used by Taliban fighters to launch attacks. No Taliban attack was taking place at the time, so shelling the village was more likely to kill civilians than insurgents. Capt. Ahmad, the Afghan commander, said later that his brigade commander had told him to shell the village in revenge for recent attacks. After frantic calls by U.S. and Afghan officers up their respective chains of command, Capt. Ahmad was ordered to stand down. "They have some problems," said Capt. Daniel Luckett, second-in-command of a U.S. company at the outpost. But "we don't need great-all we need is good enough." Afghanistan's government doesn't disclose the number of its soldiers and police killed. But officials say the deaths are widely believed to far exceed the number of coalition fatalities, which stand at 392 this year, according to the website icasualties.org. A report on the Afghan army by the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think tank, described a force riddled by ethnic and political divisions and plagued by corruption. "As a result, the army is a fragmented force, serving disparate interests, and far from attaining the unified national character needed to confront numerous security threats," the report said. In Zhari, a district that includes the village of Khadakalay, most people are Pashtun, the ethnic group at the core of the Taliban. But many Afghan officers deployed in the area are ethnic Tajiks from the north. At Combat Outpost Ashoqeh, Capt. Ahmad proudly displayed, in the windshields of his Humvees, pictures of the famed Tajik anti-Taliban militia leader Ahmad Shah Massoud, who was murdered by al Qaeda assassins on Sept. 10, 2001. Mr. Massoud is a hero in Tajik areas but despised by many Pashtuns. As for the Afghan police, many Afghan citizens appear to loathe them, considering them little better than uniformed thieves and addicts. U.S. soldiers say that in Zhari, police openly grow marijuana and shoot heroin at some stations. At a police post on the edge of Senjaray, the district's largest village, the commander, who goes by the single name Sharabuddin, said the villagers would "cut our heads off" if U.S. soldiers left. His eyes were bloodshot, his clothes filthy, his manner indifferent; he mumbled through much of the interview. A spokesman for Afghanistan's Interior Ministry, Zemeri Bashary, acknowledged the police face "difficulties" in combating corruption, theft, abuse of power and drug problems. He said he wasn't aware of specific allegations of drug use in Zhari district. In an effort to improve Afghan forces, U.S. officials are training more Afghan noncommissioned officers, the disciplinarians in Western militaries. U.S. officials also try to lead by example. At the main base in Zhari, the U.S. commander has ordered his troops to salute superior officers-an exceedingly rare practice at war-zone outposts-in order to give the Afghans a view of military discipline. Basing Afghan and U.S. soldiers together is presenting unforeseen cultural challenges. At one outpost in Zhari, according to coalition soldiers, some Afghan soldiers turned showers into toilets and some were found sexually pleasuring one another in the weight-lifting room. There have been rare instances of Afghan soldiers attacking coalition soldiers or contractors, including two in the past month. The latest came last week, when an Afghan soldier at a training range in the north shot and killed two U.S. contractors and another Afghan soldier before being gunned down himself. The shooting began after a fight between the men, officials said. In the village of Khadakalay, the four Afghan soldiers who were smoking marijuana while on patrol had recently been sent to replace men who were wounded or went AWOL, said Capt. Ahmad. After the patrol returned to its base, U.S. Sgt. Kazukietas was livid. "They were just sitting there blazing away on a joint," he said to his soldiers at a post-patrol debriefing. A few other U.S. soldiers said they'd seen some of the eight Afghan soldiers on the patrol smack children who were playfully begging pens from the Americans. "They were the worst we've ever had," Sgt. Kazukietas said. "They're going to end up with a reputation like the police." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D