Insider
Attacks Now Biggest Killer of NATO Troops
Rogue
Afghan soldiers and police turning their weapons on their allies are
now the leading cause of death for NATO troops. On Aug. 28 a man
wearing an Afghan army uniform opened fire on Australian soldiers in
the southern province of Uruzgan, killing three and wounding two.
30
August, 2012
That
attack brought to 15 the total number of NATO personnel killed in
so-called “green-on-blue” assaults in August — and raises
serious doubts about the alliance’s war strategy, which calls for
close cooperation between foreign and Afghan troops as the Afghans
gradually assume responsibility for their own security.
Of
the other 35 international troops who died
in Afghanistan this month,
12 were killed by Improvised Explosive Devices and nine died in
helicopter crashes. Insurgent gunfire and a suicide bomber accounted
for the remaining fatalities.
Marine
Corps Gen. John Allen, commander of NATO’s International Security
Assistance Force, told Danger Room he
didn’t know why the
Afghan troops turned their weapons on their foreign allies. He
implied the “sacrifices associated with fasting” during the the
Muslim holy month of Ramadan might have played a role — then
quickly qualified the remark, saying Ramadan wasn’t exclusively the
problem. In any event, “there is an erosion of trust that has
emerged from this,” Allen
said in a separate interview.
For
its part, the Afghan government blames “infiltration
by foreign spy agencies.” Allen
said he looked forward to seeing proof of this assertion. Along with
the green-on-blue attacks, there has also been a spike in Afghan
troops killing other Afghan troops. “They’re suffering casualties
from the same trend that we’re suffering” from, said Army Gen.
Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
“Were
the attacks the result of some kind of Taliban infiltration, the
problem would thus be one of counter-intelligence,” explained
Andrew Exum,
an expert on low-intensity warfare. “The alternative — that
relations between Afghan forces and their Western partners have
structurally deteriorated in fundamental ways — is a far tougher
problem to address.”
During
Danger Room’s January
visit to remote Paktika province in
eastern Afghanistan, the rising tension between U.S. and Afghan
forces was evident. When an Afghan police recruit began behaving
erratically and overstepping his authority, his American trainers
took no chances. They fired him — but only after carefully
disarming him.
The
reasons for the insider attacks are unclear. But the trend of more
and more such assaults is inarguable. Before August, green-on-blue
attacks accounted for just 12 percent of NATO troops killed. In 2011
they amounted to just six percent — up from three percent in 2010.
Foreign soldiers wounded in green-on-blue incidents have also
increased steadily in the past three years.
August’s
insider killings occurred in 18 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces but
are concentrated in the southern and eastern battlegrounds, according
to an analysis by Long
War Journal. The
three southern provinces of Helmand, Kandahar and Uruzgan account for
the majority of green-on-blue attacks.
In
the face of the rapidly-escalating insider threat, Allen, who is due
to be replaced soon as ISAF’s top general, has not signaled
any change
in NATO’s strategy.
Foreign troops will continue working closely with the Afghan soldiers
who now represent statistically the biggest danger to their lives.
In
fact, NATO troops should work more closely
with Afghan, Exum advised. “I urge U.S. and allied troops in
Afghanistan to remember that the only people who can truly protect
them from green-on-blue violence are the Afghans themselves.”
The
international alliance is scrambling to mitigate the threat. It’s
now policy for at least one NATO soldier — a
“guardian angel” —
to watch over any gathering of Afghan and alliance troops, weapon
loaded, “and hopefully identify people that would be involved in
those attacks,” Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said.
But
Panetta himself said spotting attackers before they pull the trigger
could prove difficult. “It’s clear that there’s no one source
that is producing these attacks.”
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