By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
MAZAR E-SHARIF, Afghanistan, March 20, 2018 — Noting
“breathtaking” progress the Afghan government and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani
have made, a senior officer in the Resolute Support mission said there is never
going to be a better time for the Taliban to start talking with the Afghan
government about peace.
Army Brig. Gen Michael R. Fenzel, the chief of plans for the
Resolute Support mission here, said Afghan security forces are a force in
being. They do have problems, but they are being addressed, he said. The
Afghans’ capabilities today are something he could only imagine during earlier
deployments to the country, he added.
It goes beyond purely military aspects, Fenzel said, as the
Afghan government is moving against corruption and nepotism and the government
is working to replace older, less professional military officers with
better-trained and younger ones.
Ghani’s security roadmap is sound, the general said, and the
Afghan president is following the NATO alliance’s Joint Statement of
Requirements – a list of tasks he must accomplish to keep the international
community involved.
South Asia Strategy
President Donald J. Trump’s South Asia Strategy unveiled in
August also played a large part, the general said, as America’s commitment to
the Afghan theater is not time constrained now, and more advisors working at
different levels with increased permissions.
“I won’t purport to speak for the Taliban, but I have to
imagine that their big plans to march on Kabul as we left, and now they see us
with no time line, additional commitments, overwhelming commitment of enablers
that comes with this shift of the main effort from Iraq and Syria to
Afghanistan, and they are seeing it on the ground. … It’s got to be
demoralizing from the Taliban’s perpsective,” Fenzel said in an interview with
reporters traveling with Marine Corps Gen. Joe Dunford, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff.
Some 88 percent of the Afghan population does not support
the Taliban, Fenzel said. “You look where they are now as we enter this
fighting season,” he said. “We are more capable as an advisory force than we’ve
ever been before, and the Afghan fighting forces are more effective than they
have ever been before.
“I have to wonder if they don’t say to themselves, ‘Perhaps
now is as good as it is going to get for reconciliation,’” he continued. “That
is our end state: getting to the negotiating table so we can realize peace.”
Ghani is open to negotiations, but he, the Afghan forces and
the coalition will continue pressure against the Taliban to help them make the
right decision for the country.
Army Maj. Gen. Christopher F. Bentley, senior advisor to the
Ministry of Defense at U.S. Forces Afghanistan, has eight tours in Afghanistan,
beginning in 2001. This is Afghanistan’s struggle, he said, noting that Ghani
and his national unity government have defined the roadmap for the country.
Though he and Army Gen. John M. Nicholson, the commander of the Resolute
Support mission and of U.S. forces in Afghanistan helped to define the scope,
he emphasized that success is an Afghan goal.
Bentley said the South Asia Strategy has caused many changes
in Afghanistan. The biggest effect of the announcement was the realization
among government leaders and the Afghan population that “America’s not
leaving,” he said.
That changed the calculus in the country, he added, with
government leaders and forces taking new heart and the Taliban realizing they
could not just “wait out” the NATO mission. Taliban leaders realized that “they
need to get in the arena or get left behind,” Bentley said.
Security in Kabul is High Priority
Security in Afghanistan’s capital of Kabul is front and
center this year, Bentley said, as the nation also readies for elections.
Whenever the election is, he added, the security situation will be such that it
can happen.
Kabul is a growing challenge. In 2001, its population was
around 1.2 million. It is now more than 5 million. The capital is the economic
heartbeat of the country, and Afghan forces must provide for the safety of the
citizens. “The security piece has been redefined over the last 90 days to
better incorporate a holistic national defense infrastructure,” Bentley said.
Recent attacks in Kabul – as horrific as they are – are not
military, he noted -- they are terrorism, pure and simple. The Taliban cannot
challenge Afghan forces in pitched battles, he said, and certainly cannot do so
in Kabul. That is why they have reverted to attacks on civilian, soft targets,
he explained.
Still, he added, these attacks draw the attention of the
world.
“Every event that happens in Kabul, whether we define it as
tactical or not, has a strategic implication,” he said. “We must allow for a
secure Kabul that allows for the social and economic growth of its citizens.”
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