">Forum Views ()
">Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Rugged frontier a challenge to US Afghan strategy
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
Yahoo! Search
Search:
Sign InNew User? Sign Up
News Home -
Help
Navigation
Primary Navigation
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Secondary Navigation
Australia
China
India
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia
Philippines
Thailand
Vietnam
Search
Search:
Rugged frontier a challenge to US Afghan strategy
AFP - Sunday, April 5
DOKALAM, Afghanistan(AFP) - - Rain clouds hug the rocky peaks of Afghanistan and Pakistan as a few cars and some bony cows brave the gloom and head to a small valley stream marking the border between the neighbours.
ADVERTISEMENT
Afghan Border Police (ABP) watch the travellers pass to the official checkpoint. No passports are produced. A vehicle may be stopped if guards are suspicious, but surveillance of this frontier relies heavily on local ties.
"My soldiers... they know their people, who lives in their village. So they know the ones who are bad," said Captain Mahmoud Qasim, who is in charge of the Dokalam border post in Afghanistan's remote northeastern Kunar province.
On the other side of the stream is Pakistan's North West Frontier Province, where Washington and its Western allies allege Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants are holed up, plotting new terror attacks.
But Qasim is unconcerned. Islamist extremists would not cross at an official border point, he says, but would rather infiltrate somewhere else along Pakistan and Afghanistan's porous and ill-defined 2,500-kilometre (1,500-mile) border.
This hostile frontier landscape is one of the places where the United States says Taliban-linked insurgents are slipping into Afghanistan, staging an escalating campaign of bloody attacks on government targets and foreign troops.
US President Barack Obama, unveiling his new strategy to turn around the Afghan war, put Pakistan at the heart of the fight to defeat Al-Qaeda and vowed to boost US aid and assistance to the nuclear-armed Muslim nation.
Obama also pledged to train and increase the size of the Afghan security forces, whose jobs include policing the vast frontier of towering mountain passes impenetrable for much of the year.
But the plan faces huge challenges, especially in a country known as the "graveyard of empires" and one which has bogged down US troops since the 2001 invasion overthrew the Taliban government.
"The biggest problem that we have to date is probably the same problem that every army has had in this area for hundreds or even thousands of years," said Captain Paul Roberts, who oversees US forces in Kunar's Naray district.
"That is the terrain," he said. "More troops would always be welcome and helpful, just because of the nature of the terrain."
Obama has pledged to send 17,000 US troops into Afghanistan on top of the 62,000 international soldiers already deployed in the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).
Most of the US reinforcements are headed to the south which, along with eastern Afghanistan, sees the most violence.
He also announced 4,000 extra soldiers to train the Afghan security forces.
Roberts said Obama's plans to develop the Pakistan security forces "will pay dividends", but said improved contacts between coalition forces and Pakistan's military were also crucial.
"If we were talking to the Pakistan military and they were effective, then really we could shut down a lot of these places that these militants are crossing over," he told AFP.
"It does seem to me like there is not a lot of resistance to the fighters moving from Pakistan into Afghanistan," Roberts added.
"Maybe they are overwhelmed. Maybe they have as many problems with the terrain as we do. And I think a lot of it is the culture, I think they are a lot more tied into the culture of the militants than we might want to think about."
Sergeant Gilbert Gonzales, who works for the US military collecting data on militant tactics, said his research had shown that foreign fighters were among insurgents operating on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
"He (Obama) has got some good ideas. I think it will work, coming at it from that side of the border," said Gonzales, nodding at a Pakistani mountain a few kilometres (miles) away from ISAF's Camp Bostick in northern Kunar.
"He is thinking outside the box and trying a different approach to what we have seen in the past. I'm not sure that will end the war but it is a step in the right direction."
Right now, said Roberts, training an effective and efficient ABP and swelling their ranks was a key step to stemming the flow of insurgents.
At the rain-sodden Dokalam checkpoint, Qasim says he too wants more troops, but no word on new hiring has come from the Afghan government, so he continues to rely on his soldiers' instincts.
"It is very much a buddy system, which is not a very effective way of policing a border," said Roberts. "But that's their culture, that's the way they do it."
Email Story
IM Story
Printable View
Blog This
Recommend this article
0 users recommend
Sign in to recommend this article »
Most Recommended Stories »
Related Articles: Asia Pacific
NKorea says satellite launch was successAP - 1 hour 9 minutes ago
US, Japan lead condemnation of NKorea launchAFP - 1 hour 12 minutes ago
Dozens missing as boat capsizes in north IndiaAP - 1 hour 18 minutes ago
Philippines considers pullout to save 2 hostagesAP - 1 hour 22 minutes ago
Manila rejects Red Cross kidnappers' demandsAFP - 1 hour 33 minutes ago
Enlarge Photo
Rugged frontier a challenge to US Afghan strategy
Most Popular – Asia Pacific
Viewed
Explosives chemical found in US baby formula
Journalists get shock with 'sexy' White House call
Global warming leaving its mark on polar bears
Arctic may be ice-free in 30 years: study
Guantanamo 'soooo beautiful!' Miss Universe says
View Complete List »
Search:
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy
- Terms of Service
- Community
- Intellectual Property Rights Policy
- Help
Other News on Sunday, 5 April 2009 Obama, NATO pressure Karzai over law on women
| International
|
Chavez hopes to reset U.S.-Venezuela relations
| International
|
U.S. missile kills 13 in Pakistan
| International
|
Russia says to start nuclear talks with U.S. in April
| International
|
Thousands mourn Jade Goody
| Entertainment
|
North Korea launches rocket over Japan
| International
|
U.N.'s Ban urges $300 billion in G20 aid for poor nations
| International
|
Macedonia voting, hoping to win EU, NATO embrace
| International
|
Evacuation ordered as Chile volcano erupts again
| International
|
Recession 'worse than we thought': UK minister
Bulgarian construction sector fears for EU funds
Gasparovic re-elected as Slovak president
EU struggles to put G20 reform drive into practice
Swiss ministers cast doubt on OECD tax list criteria
McCartney and Starr reunite for meditation
| Entertainment
|
Metallica rocks Hall of Fame
| Entertainment
|
NY Times threatens to close Boston Globe
Rugged frontier a challenge to US Afghan strategy
Goalkeeper scores Iraqi Olympic committee post
Karzai rejects criticism of women's law, pledges review
Iraqi police: 2 gay men killed in Baghdad slum
Darfur on brink of deeper crisis
ASEAN summit to discuss G20 plans: Thai PM
NATO to commit extra troops to Afghanistan
Taiwan slashs jobs for foreign workers
Sri Lanka's battles force it to seek bailout
Telekom Malaysia to bid for EPL broadcast rights
Q+A-How will rocket affect S.Korea markets, economy?
US kids feel grown-up stress in slumping economy
China, Ecuador move toward energy deal
Metallica rocks Hall of Fame
India's scandal-hit Satyam to pick winning bid April 13
Celebrity choreographer accused of raping 4 women
Asian firms on Iraq shortlist for oil deals
Getting tourists to walk the Obama walk
Poland's forgotten El Greco
US police seek motive for New York state slayings
Metallica, Run-DMC headed to Rock Hall of Fame
State Department says North Korea launches rocket
Arabic inscriptions of Spain's Alhambra decoded
American UN hostage released in Pakistan: UN, police
Iraq plans to open Saddam museum
Obama swoops into Prague for EU-US summit
Jazz takes the 'A' train from New York to Baghdad
Nazi camp guard wins right to stay in US
US film noir stalks French theatres
Gasparovic re-elected as Slovak president
Obama charm secures deal on new NATO chief
NKorea says satellite launch was success
US, Japan lead condemnation of NKorea launch
Dozens missing as boat capsizes in north India
Philippines considers pullout to save 2 hostages
Manila rejects Red Cross kidnappers' demands
Thai PM says tension eases at border with Cambodia
35 soldiers found in Vietnam War mass grave
NKorea launches rocket, defying world pressure
Chinese, Filipina killed in US shooting spree
NKorea's rocket passes over Japan without incident
Indonesia turns to sex workers to boost election
Rome to mend social net after Afghan minors found
Obama backs Turkey for EU but France says no
Israeli attorney general considers charging Olmert
| International
|
Pakistan finds 46 dead Afghans in container
Paris, Berlin bristle as Obama backs Turkey for EU
| International
|
At least 22 killed in Pakistan suicide bombing
| International
|
Israeli attorney general considers charging Olmert
Tragedy strikes Zimbabwe PM's family again
| International
|
Israel's Netanyahu chairs first cabinet meeting
Sri Lanka military says 25-year war in final act
| International
|
Holbrooke, Mullen visit Afghanistan
On Palm Sunday, pope urges end to migrant deaths
| International
|
Netanyahu pledges to produce peace policy soon
U.S. warns of possible attack on embassies in Nigeria
| International
|
Somali pirates seize German ship
| International
|
Obama calls for US, Europe coordination
Iraq's policewomen struggle to change perceptions
| International
|
NKorean missile launch tests Obama
Parents to see detained US journalist in Iran
Clinton works phones before UN meeting on NKorea
Obama seeks nuclear-free world
US wants limits on Antarctic tourism
US warns of potential attack on Nigeria consulate
Alleged mafia boss caught by Italian police: reports
Madonna leaves Malawi after failed adoption bid
| Entertainment
|
North Korea launch provokes outcry
Cambodia, Thailand in talks after border clashes
21 drown, 20 missing after boat capsizes in India
Obama leads world condemnation of North Korea
Sri Lanka says 420 Tigers killed in latest battles
Drought hits tea production in northeastern India
North Korea satellite in orbit or ocean?
Protesters demand end to 'aristocracy' in Thailand
Pakistani Taliban carried out Islamabad attack
At least 22 killed in Pakistan suicide bombing
US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
Madonna leaves Malawi after failed adoption bid
Madonna bolts Malawi after adoption disappointment
Ex-rebel killed in Indonesia's Aceh province
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights