No Time to Lose in Afghanistan
Printable Version
By Tim Roemer,
The
Huffington Post
The recent
attacks in Afghanistan that killed 9 U.S.
soldiers were a deadly reminder that Operation
Enduring Freedom is still very much a hot war
-- and is steadily getting hotter. This is made
frighteningly clear by a stream of recent
reports showing that Al Qaeda is flooding back
into the country and into neighboring regions
in Pakistan, threatening the security gains
that have been made since OEF was launched
nearly six years ago.
The cost of
neglecting this theater of operation the past
few years is becoming all the more painfully
obvious. According to one senior Taliban
source, speaking about Al Qaeda: "They are
awake...They are coming and going easily. In
the last year, they have been organizing more
day by day." The AP reports that a "fresh
influx" of Al Qaeda recruits is coming in from
areas ranging from Central Asia and Chechnya to
Turkey and Middle East.
Reporting also
shows that the new crop of foreign fighters is
making their way into Afghanistan via training
bases in the Federally Administered Tribal
Areas (FATA), next door in Pakistan. This is
the area that chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, Admiral Michael Mullen, commented on
recently saying that "There are clearly more
foreign fighters in the FATA than have been
there in the past. What that really speaks to
is that's a safe haven and it's got to be
eliminated for all insurgents, not just
al-Qaeda."
More alarming still is a bold
display of confidence from Al Qaeda in offering
an interview in the past few weeks from Abu
Mustafa al-Yazid, who ranks number three in the
organization's hierarchy, to the Pakistani Geo
TV channel. According to NBC News, "it was the
first time since 2002 that any top al-Qaida
official has taken the security risk of sitting
down for an interview with a bonafide
journalist." Yazid used the interview to call
"for the destruction of Pakistan's government"
and to state Al Qaeda's intent to "recapture
Afghanistan."
As pointed out by Al Qaeda
expert Michael Scheuer, Yazid also seized the
forum to remind people about the group's
assault on the Danish embassy in Pakistan, and
what it says about Al Qaeda's ongoing abilities
and tactics.
The Taliban too is
expanding its ranks with increasing numbers of
foreign fighters coming in the country via
Pakistan, according to the Afghan Ministry of
Defense. According to this report, "Afghan and
foreign troops are reporting a greater
sophistication in Taliban tactics such as
multiple roadside bombs and complex ambushes,
factors indicating more training and possibly
the presence of foreigners."
What Does
All This Mean?
First, we must obviously
devote more time, resources and focus to
operations in Afghanistan. The outcome of
Operation Enduring Freedom will have enduring
results for the United States and our national
security, and we must do whatever it takes to
win that fight, to create a secure and stable
Afghanistan, to prevent the Taliban from
reclaiming power, and to prevent that country
from serving as a base for Al Qaeda
operations.
And, secondly, in regards to
Pakistan, the United States must embark on an
invigorated three-part strategy. First, we must
encourage and support the building of
sustainable institutions and enhancing the
power of Pakistani civil society. Next, we must
engage in tougher and smarter diplomacy to
enhance our power in the region, especially
when it comes to stemming the spread of
WMD-related technology and weapons
proliferation. Lastly, we must impose a more
results-oriented system of military aid to
ensure that in providing funding, we are not
degrading our own efforts in the
region.
The necessity of especially this
third part of the strategy is made all the more
glaring by the New York Times recent report
that just recently, for instance, the CIA's
deputy director traveled to Pakistan "to
confront Pakistan's most senior officials with
new information about ties between the
country's powerful spy service and militants
operating in Pakistan's tribal areas." New York
Times reporting also claims that American
intelligence officials have linked the ISI with
the bombing of the Indian embassy in
Afghanistan, and have information showing that
the ISI is "increasingly providing militants
with details about the American campaign
against them."
The fight in Afghanistan
is not lost -- but there is no time to
lose.


