by Edmund DeMarche
SIGAR's report says 'the overall picture is bleak'
Afghanistan a 'cascading' national security failure: Robert Charles
Difficulties with the scope of the rebuilding process were only exacerbated by flaws in how the U.S. set goals that focused on short-term gains at the expense of the long term, creating a "counterproductive cycle" that resulted in new problems with new short-term solutions.
"When none of that worked, the U.S. government developed yet another short-term goal: withdrawing all troops almost immediately, even though it risked depriving the continuing reconstruction mission of the personnel needed to oversee security assistance," the report said.
Another problem was the lack of continuity in the reconstruction effort, as military and civilian personnel often served short tours of duty. As a result, the report said, "[b]y the time they found their bearings and built important relationships, they began preparing to depart."
The report also detailed how the U.S. failed to understand the "social landscapes" in the area, including within the Afghan National Defense and Security Force.
"For example, by providing material support and equipment to certain units within the ANDSF without consideration for ethnic dynamics between units, the United States could be perceived as biased in favor of one ethnic group or faction at the expense of another," the report said. "A 2017 SIGAR report on the development of the ANDSF underscored that point, finding that the United States ‘largely ignored’ intra-force political dynamics, which led to ‘major social and political imbalances’ within the ANDSF."
BIDEN SHOULD HAVE SEEN AFGHANISTAN COLLAPSE COMING, KELLY AYOTTE SAYS
Another problem that the U.S. government did not appreciate was the degree of corruption surrounding it.
"The United States failed to grasp the degree to which American largesse was captured by Afghan elites—even in the face of strong evidence that this was happening," the report said, pointing to how "U.S. programs empowered malign actors and exacerbated preexisting inequities, undermining the legitimacy of the Afghan government they were intended to bolster."
SIGAR said that "for too long the U.S. government held onto the assumption that it was creating a transparent, rule-bound Afghan government from scratch in a way that would benefit the public."
Additionally, one American official informed SIGAR "that his team was ‘played all the time by the Afghans.'" One example given was how Afghan "allies" would "exploit U.S. agencies for financial gain and share a portion of the proceeds with insurgents, who were paid to refrain from attacking convoys and project sites."
The report raised issues and questions for policy makers to consider moving forward, both with regard to Afghanistan and other countries where the U.S. operates, making clear that much work needs to be done when it comes to dealing with the aftermath of war.
"[A]fter 13 years of oversight, the cumulative list of systemic challenges SIGAR and other oversight bodies have identified is staggering," the report said.
Former national seecurity adviser Stephen Hadley was pessimistic in his view of whether there would be improvement in the future.
"We just don’t have a post-conflict stabilization model that works," he told SIGAR. "Every time we have one of these things, it is a pick-up game. I don’t have confidence that if we did it again, we would do any better."
Edmund DeMarche
Source: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/us-botched-afghanistan-reconstruction-staggering-mistakes-inspector-general-report
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