By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11, 2017 — With an increase in troops, the
U.S. and NATO strategy in Afghanistan has a good chance of enabling Afghan
security forces to do more to secure their country, the Resolute Support
mission commander said during a news conference in Brussels this week.
Army Gen. John W. Nicholson told reporters that Afghan
forces have proven their mettle in the time of the greatest risk to the Afghan
government.
“We fought most of the year … at the lowest level of
capability that we've ever had in the 16 years [of the Afghan conflict],”
Nicholson said. “It was the lowest level of capability and the highest level of
risk we've faced in this time.”
Part of the problem is the NATO train and assist mission was
not completely resourced. “We were only at an 80 percent fill on our combined
joint statement of requirements,” he said.
4-Year Plan
The new strategy will help and it builds on the four-year
plan from Afghan President Ashraf Ghani.
The plan calls for increasing the offensive capability of
the Afghan military -- specifically the commandos and air assets. Additional
trainers will allow them to go on the offensive and provide security over a
greater area of the country, the general said.
“This, coupled with pressure on the external enablers of the
insurgency, as well as social pressure at the ballot box, with the elections
over the next two years, is all designed to bring the Taliban to the table,” he
said. “So this is a fight-and-talk approach.”
Nicholson emphasized that the new strategy is
conditions-based and not on a set deadline. The modest increase in NATO, U.S.
and partner forces will enable more training at lower echelons and focus air
support where it is most needed.
New capabilities will join a force that continues to
improve, the general said. Afghan security forces went on the offensive this
year in ways that they previously haven't, he noted. All six of the Afghan
corps conducted offensive operations simultaneously. “We saw a decrease in
casualties that occurred in September,” Nicholson said. “So, even though there
was some very tough fighting, the enemy was unable to accomplish any of their
objectives this year.”
Last year, there were eight Taliban attacks on cities around
the country. This year, there was one. “Whenever the enemy attempted to mass,
he was subjected to U.S. airpower and suffered heavy, heavy casualties -- much
higher than the Afghans,” he said.
Changes at the Top
Leadership played a large role in the successes, the general
said, with Ghani replacing five of the six corps commanders at the beginning of
the fighting season. “This lowered the average age of the core commanders by 10
years, and they came into their duties with more energy, frankly, and more
offensive mindset, and it showed on the battlefield,” he said.
Nicholson ticked off the areas of success, including Helmand
province, where Afghans working with the Marines of Task Force Southwest
expanded the secure areas around Lashkar Gah and retook the Nawa district.
In the eastern part of the country, the 205th Corps was able
to expand the security environment around Tarin Kot. There was also an
expansion of security around Kunduz, the general said.
The gains were local, he said, “but they're significant in
the sense that … the Afghans were on the offensive.”
The successes caused the Taliban to change their strategy
and the group launched suicide attacks against mostly civilian targets. “Even
though they did attack some military installations and police installations,
the majority of the casualties were civilian casualties,” Nicholson said.
“We end the year at roughly the same, in terms of population
control, as we were at the beginning of the year,” he said. “However, they are
going to be postured, going into 2018, to go on the offensive.”
And Afghan forces are primed. Through December, 1,900 new
commandos will join existing units and the Afghan air force is receiving new
aircraft. “We're going to triple the Afghan Air Force and this is going to add
to their offensive capability,” the general said.
The Afghan government is doing its part by passing laws
aimed at combatting corruption that should result in a generational change
amongst the leaders of the Afghan security forces, Nicholson said.
“The biometric enrollment of every soldier and every police
officer in the Afghan security forces is ongoing. This will be complete by
April,” the general said. In addition, audit teams will be allowed to go into
the banking system and the Ministry of Finance to actually follow NATO and U.S.
money as it enters the Afghan banking system. This will enable NATO forces to
track the money from the point it enters the system to the biometrically
enrolled soldier.
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