Showing posts with label Karzai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karzai. Show all posts

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Maj. Gen. Peter Fuller says Afghan government is “isolated from reality”....His assessment is correct.

Major General Peter Fuller makes some very, very good points.
As previously stated on these pages, when it comes to what is needed, what is the "reality" on the battlefield and the ground-level point-of-view, I will always defer to the warriors before I believe anyone inside the Beltway will have the answers. This General is spot-on. General Fuller saved $1.6 Billion dollars by trimming his budget. The feckless POLS should listen to this warrior.

Having spent almost 2 years in Afghanistan, I would advise all to take General Fuller's advice. The POLS vying for the Presidency should do the same.


Really.

General: Afghan leaders out of touch
By: Tim Mak - Politico
November 3, 2011


A senior U.S. Army officer in Afghanistan called key elements of the government “isolated from reality,” said they don’t appreciate America’s sacrifice for their nation and offered up some choice words for President Hamid Karzai.

Maj. Gen. Peter Fuller, deputy commander of the American-led NATO effort to train and equip Afghan security forces, told POLITICO in an interview that top leaders in the Afghan government had not fully recognized the sacrifices in “treasure and blood” that the U.S. was making for their security and recalled that a senior Afghan official even demanded the transfer of tanks just so they could be used for parades.

The two-star general flashed irritation when he brought up Karzai’s recent remarks that Afghanistan would side with Pakistan in a war against the U.S., blasting the president’s comments as “erratic,” and adding, “Why don’t you just poke me in the eye with a needle! You’ve got to be kidding me … I’m sorry, we just gave you $11.6 billion and now you’re telling me, ‘I don’t really care’?”

“When they are going to have a presidential election, you hope they get a guy that’s more articulate in public,” Fuller said during a visit to Washington for a conference.

Karzai is term-limited and will not be running for another term. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Karzai’s remarks have been misunderstood.

Fuller recently involved Afghan generals in a strategic review of the U.S. mission and said that they didn’t understand the extent to which America is in economic distress.

“I said, ‘You guys are isolated from reality.’ The reality is, the world economy is having some significant hiccups. The U.S. is in this [too],” Fuller told POLITICO. “If you’re in a very poor country like Afghanistan, you think that America has roads paved in gold, everybody lives in Hollywood. They don’t understand the sacrifices that America is making to provide for their security. And I think that’s part of my job to educate ’em.”

The problem, he says, is a mentality that the Soviets left behind in Afghanistan.


“We didn’t buy them a lot of things that they had seen bought previously by the Soviets, the tanks and the jets. So they asked for them,’” Fuller said. “They say, ‘Well, the Russians gave us this.’”

Fuller says he responds by saying, “’You’re telling us that you’re not appreciative of $11.2 billion from the U.S. this year? We have challenges going on in our own country, and this is our national treasure.’”

In fact, the Afghan government made requests for F-16 fighter jets and tanks, even without the budget to use or maintain them, said Fuller. “I actually had someone senior tell me, ‘All I want to do is put them [tanks] on a flat bed and drive them around in a parade,” he said.

Fuller described one of his key responsibilities in the NATO Training Mission in Afghanistan rather folksily, as someone who often needs to beat back overzealous demands from certain elements of the Afghan government.

“You can teach a man how to fish, or you can give them a fish,” said Fuller. “We’re giving them fish while they’re learning, and they want more fish! [They say,] ‘I like swordfish, how come you’re giving me cod?’ Guess what? Cod’s on the menu today.”

However, Fuller said later, Afghan leadership is starting to come around to being able to appreciate American sacrifices.

“The senior leaders [in Afghanistan] are starting to understand that there is a finite amount of resources that the American public is going to provide. Do I wish that they had understood that from Day One? Absolutely. But we probably didn’t do a good job of messaging that very well,” said Fuller. “It’s our responsibility to educate them. And when sometimes you deal with sovereign nations, and they don’t hear it the first time, it’s our responsibility to repeat it.”

And Fuller has put his money where his mouth is. His command had been allotted $12.8 billion for the as-yet-unapproved FY2012 budget before he joined that NATO Training Mission in Afghanistan, but he and his team managed to trim $1.6 billion from that figure in August of this year.

“We’re having financial difficulties. I acknowledge it. I’m trying to be the best steward of the resources that are given to us. I could have bought a lot more stuff with $1.6 billion,” Fuller said.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

"Dawn Breaks on Marblehead " - Afghan President Hamid Karzai says trying to talk peace with the Taliban is useless....shocker.

REALLY ?? No....Afghan President Karzai says that talking peace with a group of godless bastards who murder women & children is useless....Well it's about time you figured that out chucklehead. The rest of the world figured that out about a decade or more ago.

The Taliban, al-Qaida and Taliban-allied Haqqani network are not interested in peace talks, only continued domination of the Afghan people and terrorizing the rest of the civilized world. These criminals are only interested in control of the drug money, world-wide terror and killing anyone who opposes them.

The more we try to appease them, the more innocents will die. We just captured one of their key leaders and killed another one in Yemen.....I say we need to keep it up. No peace talks, just find the bastards and take them out. The sooner the better.

Afghan president says talks with Taliban useless
AP – 10/01/11

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP)
— Afghan President Hamid Karzai says trying to talk peace with insurgents is futile and that neighboring Pakistan — not the Taliban — needs to be the other party in the peace talks.

The president's remarks came on a video recording that his office released on Saturday.

Karzai has been pushing for years to reconcile with the Taliban.

He says that effort is no longer viable since a suicide bomber claiming to be a peace emissary from the Taliban killed former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani at his home on Sept. 20. Rabbani was leading Karzai's effort to broker peace with the Taliban.

Karzai says the only way forward is for Afghanistan to negotiate with Pakistan.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — NATO captured a senior leader of the al-Qaida- and Taliban-allied Haqqani network active inside Afghanistan, the alliance said Saturday, describing it as a "significant milestone" in disrupting the terror group's operations.

NATO said Haji Mali Khan was seized Tuesday during an operation in eastern Paktia province's Jani Khel district, which borders Pakistan. It was the most significant capture of a Haqqani leader in Afghanistan, and could dent the group's ability to operate along the porous border with Pakistan's lawless tribal areas.

Shortly after NATO's announcement, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid denied in a message to Afghan media that Khan had been arrested but provided no evidence that he was free.

NATO described Khan as an uncle of Siraj and Badruddin Haqqani, two of the son's of the network's aging leader Jalaludin Haqqani. However, in a recent report on the Haqqani's by the Institute for the Study of War, Khan appears as a brother in-law to Jalaludin Haqqani.

The Pakistan-based Haqqani network is affiliated with both the Taliban and al-Qaida and has been described as the top security threat in Afghanistan. The group has been blamed for hundreds of attacks, including a 20-hour siege of the U.S. Embassy and NATO headquarters last month.

Last week, U.S. officials accused Pakistan's spy agency of assisting the Haqqanis in attacks on Western targets in Afghanistan — the most serious allegation yet of Pakistani duplicity in the 10-year war.

The United States and other members of the international community have in the past blamed Pakistan for allowing the Taliban, and the Haqqanis in particular, to retain safe havens in the country's tribal areas along the Afghan border — particularly in North Waziristan.

"He was one of the highest ranking members of the Haqqani network and a revered elder of the Haqqani clan," NATO said of Khan, adding that he "worked directly under Siraj Haqqani, and managed bases and had oversight of operations in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Khan also moved forces from Pakistan to Afghanistan to conduct terrorist activity, NATO said. "Jalaluddin Haqqani consistently placed Mali Khan in positions of high importance."

NATO also said that Khan had in the past year established a militant camp in Paktia and "coordinated the transfer of money for insurgents operations, and facilitated the acquisition of supplies."

During the operation Tuesday, Khan surrendered without resistance and NATO forces also arrested his deputy and bodyguard, along with a number of other insurgents, the alliance said.

"The Haqqani network and its safe havens remain a top priority for Afghan and coalition forces," NATO concluded.

The NATO statement said security forces have conducted more than 500 operations so far in 2011 in an effort to disrupt the Haqqani network leadership, resulting in the deaths of 20 operatives and the capture of nearly 300 insurgent leaders and 1,300 suspected Haqqani insurgents