U.S. Military Faces Fire as It Pulls Out of Afghanistan
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They were leaving this violent patch of land outside Kandahar, the south’s main city, just as Taliban
fighters were filtering back in from winter havens in Pakistan. It was,
as First Sgt. Jason Pitman, 35, bluntly put it, “no time to get
stupid.”
¶
The Americans knew they would be most vulnerable in their final hours
after taking down their surveillance and early-warning systems. The
Taliban knew it, too, and intelligence reports indicated that they had
been working with sympathetic villagers to strike at the departing
soldiers. Two days earlier, the militants made a test run against the
outpost, taking the rare step of directly engaging it in a firefight,
albeit a brief one, soon after the first radio antennas came down.
¶
On the same day that President Obama announced that roughly half of the
American troops still in in Afghanistan would withdraw this year, and
that Afghan forces would begin taking the lead in the war, the
smaller-scale departure from the Haji Rahmuddin II outpost was an
uncelebrated milestone.
¶
But it pointed at a harsh reality of the process: that some of the
withdrawal will happen under fire in areas of the Taliban heartland
where the idea of Afghan-led security remains an abstraction. With the
start of the annual fighting season just weeks away, some of the
hardest-won gains of the war are at risk of being lost.
¶
In the years since the Obama administration’s additional tens of
thousands of American soldiers and their Afghan allies pushed into the
grape fields, pomegranate orchards and opium poppy fields of southern
Afghanistan, some islands of relative calm have been cleared.
¶
But even though this corner of Kandahar Province — the Zhare district —
was also a focus of the troop increase, it is far from calm. And it is
not unique: many areas in the south and east where troop pullouts are
under way have had only tenuous security gains at best, despite years of
hard-fought American-led advances.
¶
The Taliban here have not given up their fight, on ground where Mullah Muhammad Omar
and his followers first rose up against a local warlord, in the
movement’s genesis. In one telling indication of the level of strife in
Zhare, even many Afghans are hesitant to make the hourlong trip from
Kandahar to the district’s mud-brick villages, many of which stand
semiabandoned after three summers of intense fighting.
¶
“My sons live in Kandahar City, and they do not like to come back here,”
said Abdul Malik, an elder from Tieranon, a village in central Zhare.
Once you are in the villages, he added, “anything can happen.”
¶
The American withdrawal is picking up pace regardless, and American
commanders have begun to cede even the most contested of ground to
Afghan forces.
¶
There are still places “that the Taliban can find sanctuary, and we
still believe there is an informal network or support structure in place
that they can rely on,” said Maj. Thomas W. Casey, the executive
officer of the Third Battalion, 41st Infantry, which operates in the
eastern and central half of Zhare.
¶
So the Americans are out on patrol alongside Afghan units here almost
every day, and running larger operations on a regular basis. Last week,
they used a weapon that shoots a line of explosives and is intended to
clear mined roads to knock down roughly 600 yards of trees that could
provide cover for Taliban scouts and attackers.
¶
On Thursday, they demolished a hill that the Taliban had used as a
fighting position. Three huge explosions — 100 pounds of high explosives
were used in each of the last two, which could be felt over a mile away
— reduced the hill to dust and dirt. The Americans on the mission
outnumbered Afghan soldiers nearly three to one.
¶There are some things the
Americans have to do solo because the Afghans cannot do them, nor will
they be able to anytime soon, commanders say. One
example is using high-tech surveillance — blimps, drones, cameras
mounted on towers at every base — to help spot militants before they
attack, and to direct airstrikes against them. They have launched numerous such attacks in the past month alone.Sources:http://www.nytimes.com
¶Bryan Denton contributed reporting.
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