Two Afghanistans?
The SGM is getting ready to head back to Afghanistan to finish up his year tour. As I listened to Jack from a prison in Afghanistan on WAR yesterday, I recalled the stories the SGM has told me about the part of the country he’s in.
Two different Afghanistans show up, and are especially documented in this article from the BBC:
Some 10,000 US-led coalition forces have been engaged in a large-scale offensive against Taleban fighters in southern Afghanistan, where around 700 people have been killed in the last few weeks. But in the capital, Kabul, the upper echelons of society appear to have forgotten the horrors on their doorstep.
Refuge from the real Afghanistan
Just a few days ago now, a grand party was held at the US Embassy in Kabul, a redoubt as impregnable as any crusader castle reinforced deep in the heart of a city still described by hardy optimists as the capital of Afghanistan.
The US Ambassador, Ronald Neumann, made an upbeat speech reminding the guests (dress code: lounge suits or national dress) of the thousands of Afghan students educated thanks to the generosity of the American people; of the schools and courthouses built, and of the roads rolled out by provincial reconstruction teams stretching far into the deserts and mountains.
There was some polite applause and then the guests made a bee line for the dance floor, the band of the 10th Mountain Division, still wearing their desert camouflage, struck up and churned out a few more Gershwin classics.
Go to the article and find out about the Kabul scene and Chicken Street.
While the “elite” play, the rest of the country is starving and still at war.
=> Additional reading here on what is really going on in Afghanistan.
Category : Afghanistan | Tags :![[del.icio.us]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/delicious.png)
![[Digg]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/digg.png)
![[Facebook]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/facebook.png)
![[Google]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/google.png)
![[LinkedIn]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/linkedin.png)
![[MySpace]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/myspace.png)
![[StumbleUpon]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/stumbleupon.png)
![[Twitter]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/twitter.png)
![[Yahoo!]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/yahoo.png)
![[Email]](http://joscafe.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/email.png)




1Spc. Patrick Ziegler
wrote on 18 July 2006 at 8:57
I am Spc. Patrick Ziegler with U.S. Central Command Public Affairs. I wanted to give your readers a place to get information on the situation in Afghanistan. The U.S. CENTCOM website is a good place to get information as it becomes available. Our URL is http://www.centcom.mil
——-
Latest press release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 18, 2006
Release# 060718-05
Combined Forces Command – Afghanistan Statement
Col. Thomas Collins, CFC-A spokesman
Good Afternoon and thank you for coming today. We plan on having these briefs every day except Wednesday and Friday to better inform the Afghan people on Coalition activities. These statements will provide a short overview on Coalition activities in the last 24 hours and highlight the day’s key topics of interest.
Afghan and Coalition forces continue to disrupt Taliban leadership, facilitators and rank and file fighters throughout southern Afghanistan , but particularly in the Sangin, Musa Qala and Baghran District of Helmand Province.
Media have called us today to ask our opinion on Taliban claims of success in the south and I’d like to briefly address those requests.
We continue to monitor the security situation in all the provinces. We are seeing the growing capability of the ANA and the ANP in all the provinces. We are pushing the Taliban extremists out of their safe havens, out of places the government has never been before. They are failing.
The districts the Taliban have noted are in the further most southern regions of Afghanistan . It is true: the Taliban have reconstituted and dispersed. But this is certainly not about the Taliban being strong. The reality is that the government has not yet extended to the far-reaching areas of the country.
The Taliban extremists have taken control of the areas of Garmser and Nawayi Barakazayi, however, Coalition forces do have them under observation. Decisive operations will begin soon; I cannot tell you when for security reasons, but we will re-establish government authority in those areas soon.
I assure you that the Coalition and Afghan National Security Forces are on the offensive and we will not rest until the extremists are defeated.
Ultimately the Taliban extremists will fail because all they have is a very dark vision. A vision that includes murder, burning down schools, taking advantage of the desperate and the poor, and suicide bombers dressed up as women in burkas.
Some recent news of note:
· Afghan and Coalition forces in the last week have killed numerous lower and mid-level commanders that the senior Taliban leadership rely on to intimidate villages, threaten elders and lead small bands of extremists to conduct attacks on Afghan and Coalition forces.
· In the Tarin Kowt District of Uruzgan Province yesterday, Coalition forces attacked and destroyed a truck that extremists were loading with mortar equipment. A heavy engagement followed with the extremists. One Coalition Soldier was killed and 11 Coalition Soldiers were wounded in that battle and brought to a Coalition medical facility for treatment.
I would now like to highlight for you a few of the Taliban extremists more egregious actions in the last couple of days.
· 16 July – Burned a school in Parwan Province .
· 16 July – Tossed a grenade into a wedding party in Khost, killing one and injuring 16 innocent people.
· 16 July – a suicide bomber killed one ANA Soldier and four Afghan civilians in Gardez. Two ANA were wounded and approximately 20 civilians were wounded in the attack.
· 17 July – Launched four to five RPG rounds into a girl’s school in Lahgman Province .
· Today, 18 July – Detonated an IED under a bridge in Khost Province .
-30-
2Jo
wrote on 18 July 2006 at 9:09
Thank you! I read the briefings everyday
I know there is much more going on over there than what is being reported, but people also need to realize, that as in America, the “upper crust” tends to also forget what the “lower crust” is dealing with. Really said.
3Honza Prchal
wrote on 18 July 2006 at 13:04
But the refugees continue to return. Life in Iran and Pakistan must really be dreadful. For one thing, there are likley a lot more Taliban in those locations than back home.
That said, when people vote with their feet, it really means something profound about conditions on the ground. Afghanistan likely still ahs lots of internally displaced persons, but folks are streaming back to somewhere in the country that used to be, as Transoxiana and under other iterations, the center of a wealthy and vibrant Greco-Budhist Culture at the center of the world, back in the day.