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Afghan strongmen tame Taleban’s bastion where US forces struggled

KANDAHAR: Afghan anti-Taleban militia commander Abdul Wadud (right) 63, walks with his soldiers during a patrol in the Panjwai district of Kandahar province. — AFP
KANDAHAR: Afghan anti-Taleban militia commander Abdul Wadud (right) 63, walks with his soldiers during a patrol in the Panjwai district of Kandahar province. — AFP

ZANGIABAD: A captured Taleban rifle dangling at his side, commander Sultan Mohammed swaggers through a bomb-cratered district that was once a hornet’s nest of insurgents, symbolizing a rare Afghan military triumph where US forces failed. Panjwai was one of the centerpieces of US President Barack Obama’s 2009 troop surge ambitiously aimed at crushing the Taleban, but the southern district soon became a poster child of the failed intervention.

Strongmen including Mohammed, the Panjwai police chief with a reputation for brutality, in recent years did what the Americans could not-tame the insurgent haven that had come to be known as the “blood fountain”. The Taleban are now out of sight in the district in Kandahar, pomegranate orchards stand on fields once awash with landmines, and poppy farms that boosted militant coffers are just a memory. “When US forces were here, the Taleban were within one kilometer of their bases. Now they aren’t even within 100 kilometers,” Mohammed said, trailed by armed loyalists. “We did what American soldiers could not-rid the area of the Taleban.”

To get a full measure of the turnaround, juxtapose Panjwai against the turmoil convulsing the wider region, increasingly drawing NATO troops back into the conflict a year after their combat mission ended. Neighboring opium-rich Helmand, Afghanistan’s largest province, is teetering on the brink of collapse. Overstretched Afghan troops are retreating from volatile southern districts, ceding swathes of key areas to the Taleban. And conflict-induced displacement is edging towards a new record as the Taleban now control more territory than in any year since 2001. Panjwai offers a striking contrast: children in schools learning algebra instead of a Taleban curriculum, grape farmers tending their vines even after sundown, and once-wary visitors jaunting around on pheasant-hunting trips.

‘Don’t bring enemy alive’
The transformation of Panjwai, birthplace of the Taleban movement, defies the common perception that Afghan security forces-bedeviled by high casualties and desertions-cannot stand alone without NATO backing. To its advantage, observers say Panjwai is not a messy froth of tribal and economic dynamics. And unlike neighboring districts gripped by violence, it does not fall on a major drug trafficking route. “Being a backwater has helped Panjwai achieve detente that has seen many local insurgent fighters return to farming,” a Kabul-based Western official said.

But the turnaround is also widely credited to anti-Taleban strongmen such as General Abdul Raziq, Kandahar’s powerful police chief who controls the province with an iron hand and is accused of running secret torture chambers, an allegation he denies. “His brief to his men is simple: ‘Don’t bring the enemy alive’,” an official close to Raziq said. Last week the interior ministry said it was probing a graphic video apparently showing Mohammed’s men abusing an alleged suicide bomber.

His hands bound to a police vehicle, the video which went viral shows the man being dragged along the road before a mob turns on him and one officer tries to bite the flesh off his arm. To the supporters of Raziq and Mohammed, such savagery has made them a bulwark against the stubborn insurgency, more vital than ever as Afghanistan spirals into chaos. But their success is spawning ever more brutality. “If I catch a Taleban supporter planting a landmine, I will make him sit on it and blow him up,” said Serajuddin Afghanmal, a police official credited for clearing thousands of mines in Panjwai.

‘Cars turned into coffins’
Under the Americans, Panjwai was so heavily riddled with underground bombs that it was commonly joked the district grows mines more than pomegranates, grapes and tomatoes. When Obama’s 30,000-strong troop surge ended in 2012, the district was ranked by the US Pentagon among Afghanistan’s 10 most dangerous districts. US forces showered Panjwai with aid money but calm could not be purchased. Rabid dogs now occupy some of the clinics they built. “The Americans thought they could restore security by floating balloons (surveillance blimps) in the air,” said Haji Mohammad, a policeman at an abandoned US base in Panjwai.

“But the insurgents were able to plant mines next to their bases. Whenever they stepped out their armored cars turned into coffins.” He said local residents fumed when US soldiers entered homes and mosques, affronting cultural sensitivities, and razed orchards that blocked the view from their spy balloons. In 2012 Robert Bales, a battle-jaded American soldier, massacred 16 civilians in Panjwai in a rampage seen as the worst American wartime atrocity in decades, further aggravating anti-US sentiment.

Analysts warn Panjwai’s gains are at risk of unraveling as forced eradication of poppy crops creates economic hardship and as violence spills over from neighboring Helmand. But, says Mohammed the police chief, the battle for Panjwai was won on the day the last US soldiers pulled out. “With the Americans gone, the Taleban have no moral justification to be here,” he said, clasping an M4 assault rifle snatched from the insurgents, now his personal weapon. “Foreigners can prop us up with weapons but they don’t belong here. Only Afghans can really win Afghanistan’s war.”- AFP

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