US-Afghan Strategic partnership

The strategic deal between the Americans and Afghans has been finalized, but no details have been released yet. Lets see what would be the final details and what would be its impact on the security in the region.BBC News - Afghanistan and US agree deal on strategic partnership

**US and Afghan negotiators have finalised a partnership agreement for the US role in Afghanistan after its forces withdraw at the end of 2014.
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The draft agreement on their long-term relationship was signed in the Afghan capital Kabul after months of talks.

No details were released, with the deal to be reviewed by both presidents.

There have been sharp disagreements over how much financial support the US and Nato will provide after foreign troops leave.

Last week the Afghan President Hamid Karzai called on the US to make a written commitment to pay a minimum of $2bn (£1.2bn) towards the maintenance of Afghan forces.

**‘Strong foundation’
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At last week’s meeting of Nato ministers, the US was asking other nations to pay up to $1bn (£630m) a year, while it provides up to $3bn a year in support.

But it was unclear if the US was willing to make a firm commitment.

The agreement was signed on Sunday in Kabul by US ambassador Ryan Crocker and Afghanistan’s national security adviser Rangin Dadfar Spanta.

“The document finalised today provides a strong foundation for the security of Afghanistan, the region and the world and is a document for the development of the region,” Mr Spanta said in the statement announcing the deal.

A final commitment on funding Afghan security is expected to be announced at the Chicago summit of Nato leaders next month.

There have been doubts over whether the Afghan forces would be able to provide adequate security once Nato forces withdraw.

But at last week’s Nato meeting the US secretary of state Hillary Clinton said the co-ordinated attacks by the Taliban in Kabul in which two Afghan soldiers and 17 militants were killed earlier this month, showed otherwise.

“The response by the Afghan national security forces were fast and effective and the attacks failed… So the Afghans are proving themselves increasingly ready to take control of their own future”.

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Peace in Af-Pak region is not possible without active participation of Pakistan:), after US troops leave the region it will go back to civil war:)

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

believe you me Pakistan does not want that.

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Of course, no one would be more happy than Pakistanis if their is peaceful Afghanistan, but intentions are mostly different from strategic compulsion:), In absence of american, Taliban will try to regain lost glory and Karzai government has to fight with it, If pakistan supports Karzai it can cause havoc in Pakistan and if they turn blind eye to Taliban then Pakistan faces international pressure and sanctions:), Indians and Chinese are sure to compete as Afghanistan connects to oil-rich region and connects to pretty much everything in Asia and again to achieve this without gaining proper cooperation from pakistan, it is impossible and due to porous border and same ethnic people across the region the destiny of both Afghanistan and Pakistan are intertwined:)

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

If taleban try to fight their way back, what has that to do with Pakistan? Do you think it would suit Pakistan to have an Afghanistan which is unstable and in civil war? Because ultimately there is a chance of that spilling over into Pakistan. Pakistan needs a stable Afghanistan which has representation of all ethnicities, at the moment the Afghan National Army has negligible pashtun participation and if the Americans dont rectify that there will be a civil war. And yes Pakistan does not have a remote control of the war, it can talk or maybe help the world to talk to them but that does not necessarily mean that they follow Pakistani diktats.

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Corps commander interview:

**The withdrawal of most combat troops from Afghanistan at the end of 2014 has raised questions from Kabul to Brussels to Washington about the potential chaos that may follow if the Taliban press to take over again. **

Few people are as worried about what the pullout could trigger next door in Pakistan as Lieutenant-General Khalid Rabbani, commander of the frontline corps fighting militants in the northwest of the country.

**Sitting in his office in the heavily-fortified headquarters of the XI Corps in Peshawar, he speaks anxiously about creating the right perceptions as the foreign troop exit approaches.

“If they are leaving and giving a notion of success to the Taliban of Afghanistan, this notion of success may have a snowballing effect on to the threat matrix of Afghanistan,” Rabbani told Reuters in an interview this week.

“On our side, it may give impetus to the already dying down so-called Tehreek-i-Taliban’s effort over here.”
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The parliament recently concluded a review of ties with the United States, recommending an end to American drone strikes in the nation’s tribal areas.

Rabbani acknowledged the strikes can be effective, but said they also kill civilians and are counterproductive.

**“You kill five, and you’re making 50 more enemies. It’s very clear arithmetic. This is the arithmetic that we’re trying to make them understand,” he said, adding that instead intelligence should be shared so that Pakistan can act.
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“They may indicate (a target), we’ll pound it with the precision shooting of our F-16s. So it can be done, it has been done at one or two places. Why can’t this model be followed, we keep on telling them this is a possible model to be followed.”

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

how many operations they can launch without using pakistani soil of FATA, Waziristan, NWFP:), assuming they can raise money from various organization through donations but from where they would get supply of primary offensive weaponry. Americans won't rectify anything because then they lose their relevance in Afghanistan, a democratic afghanistan is not in their favour, they always support favorable dictator than a democracy. An unstable Afghanistan is unsuitable for everyone in the region and more so for Pakistan. No one dictates to Uncle Sam, its uncle who dictate to his nephews:), Democracy is strength of USA and threat to American interests everywhere:D

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Ok they are using the soil of FATA for carrying out operations deep within Afghanistan. So what are the American/NATO/ISAF forces doing there? Whats their performance? The situation for Pakistan is the other way round the terrorists have moved into Eastern Afghanistan and made sanctuaries there but the Americans dont operate against them. Is it Pakistan’s responsibility to go and fight against the taleban in east Afghanistan?

As far as raising money is concerned, what are the Americans doing to stop the opium plantation in the country?

Opium farming in Afghanistan rising again, bleak UN report admits | World news | guardian.co.uk

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

We simply cannot ignore the importance of Pakistan in bringing peace and stability to the region. At the same time, Pakistan also wishes to see a safe and stable Afghanistan. Therefore, it is easy to see that the need for cooperation between our nations should hold the utmost importance. Pakistan at the moment is plagued with the acts of terror on its land. Terrorist organizations like the TTP and the Haqqani network continue to infiltrate the land with their terrorist activities. These terrorist organizations have not just contained their activities to the land of Pakistan. The Haqqani network has operatives working on both sides of the border. We strongly encourage Pakistan to go after the elements that are using its homeland to spread chaos throughout the region. We are working hard to improve the level of cooperation and coordination between our nations, and hope to eliminate the menace that’s preventing us from achieving our common objectives.

MAJ Nevers,
DET, United States Central Command
(http://www.Centcom.mil/Ur)

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Major Nevers, First thing is that you should talk in clear terms with Pakistan, both counrtries are double-gaming each other:D

As far as raising money is concerned, what are the Americans doing to stop the opium plantation in the country?

Post 2014 Afghanistan won’t be what Afghan wish it to be but what US wish it to be. The pakistani strategy should be how much they can bend Uncle Sam without showing finger:). All the areas from where Taliban can launch attack in afghanistan are internationally known Pakistani territory, US drives the international opinion including the UN. Semi-autonomus Haqqani network is considered the arm of ISI without which operation in Helmand is next to impossible:),Don’t expect much cooperation from american but think of how to save your pakistan from the present situation:), For Opium, there cousins Brit fought war with China in early 19th century, US will do same to retain their position in future afghanistan:)

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Do you know that east Afghanistan itself has become a sanctuary for the taleban and the Americans have not done anything about that. The Pakistani border with Afghanistan is porous and it can never be ensured that the traffic between the two countries stops. Anyways the Americans can improve and clear the areas on afghan side and they have not done that, so much so the elements that Pakistan had driven out are in eastern Afghanistan and even the elements who are troubling Americans. Last year the helicopter which was carrying American seals was shot down in the area, the Americans can do what ever they have the media on their side. Pakistan should adopt its policies according to its interests and not driven by American interests in the region.

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

US means international opinion, even if some has opinion otherwise, they hardly matter. US would target only taleban which is strategical challenge to them:). Honestly, I don't expect any pact more than SOFA, where American forces would be stone throw away from the region. Pakistan at most can monitor but can't control tribal agencies, but pakistan has to find a win-win situation so that it does not lose economically and remains favorable in international circles. First is to eliminate TTP and see that it is unable to operate in Pakistan and secondly try that its soil is not used in any anti-US interests in Afghanistan. One part of that can even include using surplus terrorist operating against afghans against india though:D

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Afghan taleban are part of Afghanistan as Pakistani taleban are part of Pakistan, you can keep on fighting them and in the process keep on producing more. This war cannot be won militarily which some of us have been saying since the war was launched. Neither have Pakistani tribal areas ever been tamed and same is the situation of Afghanistan. More than Pakistan, it would be the responsibility of NATO/ISAF to find a solution which is long lasting.

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

An interesting article

The Limits of “Afghanization” - by Thomas H. Johnson and Matthew DuPee | The AfPak Channel

The strategy of having the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) take over the security burden from the U.S and NATO forces is now a centerpiece of President Obama’s Afghanistan policy. But as decision makers continue to push hard for a speedy “Afghanization” of the conflict, serious thought should be given to the current policy paradox of trying to rapidly expand an already unmanageable indigenous military force structure while aggressively pursuing informal security organs, namely static militias and various community defense forces. And with the Afghan government’s total annual revenue hovering around $1 billion and the Obama administration’s budget request for fiscal year 2012 of $12.8 billion to train and equip Afghanistan’s expanding army and national police force, it will be extremely difficult for Afghanistan to manage and sustain a force of that size and expense over the long term without protracted external financial and material support.

Realistic expectations and level foresight regarding the physical limitations of these pursuits are required if any sort of security or stability equilibrium is to be achieved in Afghanistan before the eventual scale down of international forces in 2014.

The U.S. handover of security responsibilities to the Karzai regime begins this July with a transition to ANSF predominance in the cities of Lashkar Gah in the south, Herat in the west and Mazar-i-Sharif in the north and the relatively stable provinces of Bamyan, Panjshir and Kabul (except Surobi district). Afghanistan’s national security services are increasingly viewed as the strategic fire escape to allow the scale-down of international forces preceding the larger withdrawal scenario.
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The key instrument in this transition is the Afghan National Army (ANA), especially given the fact that the Afghan National Police (ANP) in many parts of the country is a hated institution because of their abusive, predatory and illegally extractive reputation. The ANP in Kandahar, for example, are known to at times provide vehicles to local insurgents for kidnappings and assassinations.
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The United States has spent an astounding $18 billion on reconstructing the ANA since 2002, but it remains difficult to get accurate numbers on the actual size of the force “present for duty,” a fact that makes it difficult to gauge what condition Afghanistan’s national force structure might look like in late 2011 or beyond.

U.S. Senators Carl Levin (D-MI) and Jack Reed (D-RI) recently stated in the Washington Post](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/03/03/AR2011030305660.html)** that Afghanistan added “about 70,000 troops in 2010,” and that “the Afghans are on track to meet goals of 171,000 soldiers and 134,000 police officers by October [2011],” but a staggering attrition rate and a serious gap in quality recruits and leadership positions belie the veracity of such claims. At the current attrition rate of around 32 percent for the ANA (25 percent for Afghan police), only 70,000 of the 110,000 men that were recruited in 2010 remain engaged in some aspect of the national army according to U.S. Lieutenant General William Caldwell, the commander of NATO’s training mission in Afghanistan.
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**Again, according to Senators Levin and Reed, the Obama administration is currently considering a proposal that seeks to increase Afghan security forces by about 30,000 soldiers, and a similar number of police, bringing the estimated total Afghan security force levels to about 378,000 by the end of 2012. But is this goal even possible considering the available and qualified manpower pool? And how was this level of forces decided upon? Does this equate to some ratio of security providers per population or was this number pulled out of a hat?


****The Defense Department often uses the vague phrase of “trained and equipped” when referring to ANA troop strength in press releases, a number that is not the same as troops actually present for duty. In many respects, the number of trained and equipped ANA service members is irrelevant because of desertion, attrition and other dynamics. When one of the authors recently asked a senior U.S. government manager involved in ANA training in Kabul what the official figure the U.S. uses when assessing those ANA “present for duty,” it was answered that 75 percent of the ANA force is assumed “present for duty” at any particular time. When this figure was relayed by the authors to senior U.S. Government analysts, they were dumbfounded and suggested they believe that the number of ANA “present for duty” was much smaller - between 40 and 60 percent.


****It is estimated that at least one third of the ANA evaporates every year through desertions and non-reenlistment. A member of the U.S ANA training mission in Kabul told the authors that in an unpublished report, the U.S. Army’s Center for Army Lessons Learned (CALL) in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, had a professional statistician analyze ANA growth and attrition rates in 2005. According to this same source, the report concluded (p. 6) that the ANA could never grow larger than 100,000 men, because at that point the annual attrition losses would equal the maximum number of new recruits entering the force each year.


****In addition to the quantitative problems faced by the ANA in fielding an adequate force, it is confronted with a wide variety of qualitative problems ranging from illiteracy to drug use and medical problems, to name but a few.


****Recruitment also remains a particularly divisive issue as far as ethnic diversity and quotas are concerned. Officials from the Afghan Ministry of Defense, the United States Armed Forces, and theInternational Crisis Group undertook independent inquiries into the ethnic demographics of the ANA between November 2009 and January 2010. The “template” approved by the Ministry of Defense for recruitment use attempts to recruit based on ethnicity - maintaining that the ANA should reach a personnel quota of 42 percent Pashtun, 27 percent Tajik, 9 percent Uzbek, 9 percent Hazara, and 13 percent others, such as Arab, Baluch and Nuristani. The goal of using ethnic quotas to balance the ANA comes “even at the expense of quality,” according to the Combined Training Advisory Group’s U.K. Brigadier General Jon Watson, as reported in Jane’s Defense Bulletin. Rigid ethnic recruiting goals on behalf of the coalition and the Afghan government, ignores the socio-political and historical realities of Afghanistan, which include Western partnerships with non-Pashtun groups like the Northern Alliance and more favorable security environments in non-Pashtun areas that make recruitment and the retention of troops less difficult than in places like Afghanistan’s Pashtun south.


*****Even with a seemingly balanced representation throughout the ANA according to the above ethnic breakdown, ethnic Tajiks still dominate the officer and NCO ranks. **According to Afghanistan scholar Antonio Giustozzi, approximately 70 percent of Afghan *kandak (battalion) commanders are Tajik, a legacy of the role the Tajik-dominated Northern Alliance played in the fall of the Taliban in 2001. Having one ethnic group dominate the leadership positions in an ethno-linguistically fragmented society has helped discourage certain other groups, especially southern Pashtuns, from joining the ANA, though there are a host of reasons explaining the imbalanced recruitment to ANSF.


****Since 2005, amid a deteriorating security situation and increased Taliban presence throughout southern and southeastern Afghanistan, the Afghan government found itself battling against profound recruitment deficiencies among southern Pashtuns. Southern Pashtun families who sent sons to join and fight with the ANA were often intimidated, threatened and physically targeted by Taliban and insurgent factions, leaving other ethnicities and communities to fill this recruitment void.

For instance, in the southern province of Zabul, one of seven Pashtun-dominated provinces suffering from a surge in anti-government activities, U.S. Embedded Training Teams (ETTs)indicated in 2009 that only 5 percent of the ANA *kandak responsible for the province was Pashtun. Furthermore, U.S. ETT personnel in Zabul estimated that 70% of all *kandaks are commanded by Tajiks, a finding supported by additional field research conducted by the International Crisis Group (p. 20). Even in the Pashtun province of Zabul, there are only twoPashtun *kandak commanders out of a total of six. Similar observations were found in most of the rural environs of Kandahar Province. And in a 2009 trip to Kandahar, the authors observed that in the Dand district many ANSF personnel passed themselves off as Pashtun to the local International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), but were in fact Tajiks from as far north as Samangan Province, many of whom chose security positions in the south because the monthly salary topped security wages in the north.


****The lack of Pashtun participation has led to several controversial proposals, including a return to forced conscription and the mobilization of community defense forces, of which several pilot programs have already been attempted, including the Afghan Public Protection Force (APPF) in Wardak and Logar Provinces, and the Afghan Local Police (ALP), implemented throughout many provinces including Kandahar, Uruzgan, Helmand and Kunduz. But the organization of these programs often fails to deal with persistent questions such as how such informal security organs will transition into formal Afghan security forces in the future. Currently, there is no feasible plan in place to streamline the reintegration process of informal security forces into the national security structure, or to track the government-ordered demobilization of Afghan private security contractors, which collectively employed over 40,000 armed individuals by 2010.

The last thing Afghanistan needs is a reincarnation of mobilized, dysfunctional, well-armed thugs extracting and abusing local citizenry, as the warlordism and disparate militia rule of the early 1990s was one of the primary reasons for the political rise of the Taliban in the first place! NATO and Kabul are both faced with a serious number of grievous limitations and challenges to this strategy of establishing and maintaining parallel security forces, as well as eventually transitioning these forces to central government control.


******Moreover, as pressure mounts to increase the size of the ANA, looser vetting processes, shorter military training courses and insufficient resources provided for coalition military trainers will only increase the pool of inadequate and unsatisfactory recruits culled from the lowest strata of society. These new recruits will undoubtedly include those already addicted to drugs, thieves, murderers and criminals. Training courses for new ANA recruits have already been reduced from ten to eight weeks for basic infantry requirements in light of the new expansion efforts. In contrast, as Lester Grau and Michael A. Gress noted in their book, *The Soviet Afghan War: How a Super-Power Fought and Lost, during the Soviet-occupation of Afghanistan, drafted soldiers underwent a one-month boot camp, and training for sergeants and specialists lasted three to four months.


******Additionally, logistics and clerical duties throughout the ANA are likely the weakest cog in rebuilding and reorganizing the force, especially given the endemic illiteracy rate that hovers around 90 percent among ANA personnel and staff. The lack of technical specialists and a “maintenance” culture is nothing new to Afghanistan. Currently, both ANA and ANP mentors report severe deficiencies in the Ministry of Defense supply system, referring to the system as a “fill or kill” process in which requests are made and then disappear. Even the top-rated unit of the ANA, 1[SUP]st[/SUP]*kandak, 2[SUP]nd[/SUP] Brigade of the 203[SUP]rd[/SUP] Corps, indicated (p. 17) that their supply process is “a failure.” This deficiency simply increases the primary dependence of U.S. and NATO soldiers to remedy supply issues. Members of the ANSF often complain about where they will get their next meal, which begs the question of how they will get ammunition and other supplies when they are most needed.


****Additionally, an overemphasis by the international community to instill an infantry-centric approach in rebuilding the ANA in a post-Taliban environment has led to a severe shortfall in non-combat training, especially among specialists in logistics, supply and maintenance. Almost all logistic units have miserable Capability Milestone (CM) ratings (the metric used to determine combat readiness). U.S. and NATO logistics mentoring programs did not begin until late 2008, according to findings by the Inspector General of the U.S. Defense Department published in 2009; further evidence that the ANA will not be able to support its own growth especially given the intense focus by NATO to expand the ANA.


****Naturally, there is no clear cut answer on how to best overhaul, maintain, and field an Afghan National Army given the current unstable environment and complexities regarding Afghanistan’s larger contemporary conflict, now entering its 33[SUP]rd[/SUP] consecutive year. Although conventional wisdom suggests the ANA are far more professional and trained than other ANSF units, the ANA, Afghan government and NATO allies have a long road to travel before a professional, capable, and sustainable National Army emerges.


Thomas H. Johnson is a Research Professor in the National Security Affairs Department at the Naval Postgraduate School and the Director of the Program for Culture & Conflict Studies, where Matthew DuPee is a Research Associate.

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

These terrorists have left us with no choice but to go after them with full force. They regularly target our forces, kill innocent civilians, and plant suicide attacks throughout the region. We cannot take the back seat and allow them to continue the massacre at will. All governments carry the responsibility of safeguarding their lands and protecting their citizens. Our governments are doing no different by targeting those who are focused on spreading terror and disorder. These terrorists need to be made aware that there are repercussions associated with their acts of terror. At the same time, we have laid the option for those who sincerely wish to see Afghanistan become a safe and stable country. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton clearly stated, “Insurgents must renounce violence, abandon al Qaeda, and abide by the constitution of Afghanistan, including its protections for women and minorities. If insurgents cannot meet those red-lines, they will face continued and unrelenting assault."

MAJ Nevers,
DET, United States Central Command
www.Centcom.mil/Ur

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

^ so what are the Americans doing to evict the terrorists from Eastern Afghanistan? the Picture is showing the Pakistani safe havens where as the blue circles across the border depict the safe havens within Afghanistan which it seems the Americans will leave (most of them) for the Afghans to clear for themselves.

ISAF’s new plan for Afghanistan - The Long War Journal

Both the northern and southern regions of East Afghanistan have strong Taliban insurgent activity. Both also provide the Taliban with infiltration routes into Afghanistan from their safe havens in Pakistan. The original 2009 plan called for counterinsurgency operations to be conducted in both of these regions. However, the new plan calls for operations only in a portion of “Southern” RC-East, in the provinces of Wardak, Logar, Ghazni, and Paktia (Paktika and Khost are not included). The plan for operations in “Northern” RC-East has been canceled.
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A higher risk for the rest of Afghanistan
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**With the early withdrawal of “surge” troops, fewer remaining US troops overall means that even the smaller operation in “Southern” RC-East will be possible only by taking greater risks in the rest of the country.
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With operations canceled in “Northern” RC-East, no additional troops would be sent there. In fact, some US troops would be withdrawn from there and sent to “Southern” RC-East.

With troop strength below even the current level, Northern RC-East will be at a higher risk from insurgent infiltration and operations. This region includes the important city of Jalalabad as well as the Khyber Pass, a main transportation route between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Kunar and Nuristan provinces are already considered havens for the Taliban and allied terror groups, with several districts already under enemy control.

In addition, General Allen testified that he is considering transferring some troops from South Afghanistan to participate in the “Southern” RC-East operation. Troops in South Afghanistan are currently charged with holding the gains made during counterinsurgency operations in 2010 and 2011. While the decision has not been made, it risks losing some of the gains made in South Afghanistan to insurgent re-infiltration.
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A heavier role for the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF)
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Why would General Allen accept this higher-risk plan? Partly, General Allen is relying on the Afghan National Security Forces to perform better than expected. In the areas where US Forces are being drawn down, he will be relying more heavily on the ANSF to prevent insurgent reinfiltration. In his testimony he said: “The growth of the [Afghan National Security Forces] has been dramatic,” and noted that the Afghan army is moving to "full partnership with us within this comprehensive counterinsurgency campaign."General Allen has taken a further measure to support the ANSF in this increasingly difficult mission. In February, the US Army announced that it would deploy an addition 1,800 army and civilian trainers and advisers to support the ANSF.

Read more: ISAF’s new plan for Afghanistan - The Long War Journal

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

the peace will only happen when the last American terrorist enemy is ejected from the land doesn't matter if they alive or dead this is first step for peace in afghanistan.

These dirty kuffar have no right over the muslims they have nothing but hatred for islam so they should not even be given one inch of breathing space even in talks.

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Peace won't come even after that, If US leaves this nation on its own, there will be civil war between warring tribes. Now because of US international media even talks about Afghanistan. Afghanistan will return to its pre-2003 condition and no one in the world will give a damn about it:), when it comes to killing, Taliban is no angel:)

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Your hostility is clearly depicted from your comments, but unfortunately, it is also quite obvious that you are completely oblivious to reality. The terrorists that we are fighting indiscriminately target innocents with no regard for their race or religion. And if you think that the U.S. has waged a war against Islam, then why is it that we have Muslim partner nations fighting alongside us in the WOT? The truth is that the terrorists had wreaked havoc upon the nation of Afghanistan prior to our arrival. And despite the fact that the Taliban have lost control, the remaining few are still resisting and spreading fear with their acts of terror. Do you expect these terrorists to all the sudden turn into law abiding citizens, if the U.S. were to halt their efforts, and withdraw abruptly? Do we not have enough history to determine that they pose a serious threat to the nation of Afghanistan? Do they not continue to make their intentions clear with their inhumane acts of terror? We do not plan to stay in Afghanistan a day longer than necessary. But we will not risk the lives of Afghan citizens and leave them at the mercy of these terrorists. We want to make sure that the nation of Afghanistan is ready and fully equipped to safeguard its land. We committed to bringing peace and stability to the region, and will leave the ANSF fully capable of protecting their nation.

‏MAJ Nevers,
DET, United States Central Command
www.Centcom.mil/Ur

Re: US-Afghan Strategic partnership

Hostility yes all the sincere muslims will be hostile to any kuffar who bomb, kill, mutilate and urinate on muslims because that is what american miltary does that is fact whole world seen that on their tv screens so it is you who is oblivious to reality.

you claim you have muslim partners? what karzai and zardari haha puppet regimes don’t count. A decade of failure in afghanistan shows you have no partners just millions and millions of muslims that cant wait to see you dead or kicked out after your humiliation on the battlefield.

lets face it mr enemy of the muslims you post propaganda on forums like this for a monthly pay check and everyone sees through it, its a open joke on this forum people laughing at you and your lies. You want some reality i give you some for free, You cannot stop the inevitable which is your empire is crumbling minute by minute, your economy is finished and living on borrowed time, the islamic state will be established from indonesia all the way to morroco and all your interests,interference and military bases will be overrun in the muslim world.

What’s that you can’t see it, good then you won’t know what hit you when it does happen.